Nicolas Poussin (UK:/ˈpuːsæ̃/,US:/puːˈsæ̃/,[1][2]French:[nikɔlapusɛ̃]; June 1594 – 19 November 1665) was a leading painter of theclassicalFrench Baroque style, although he spent most of his working life inRome. Most of his works were on religious and mythological subjects painted for a small group of Italian and French collectors. He returned to Paris for a brief period to serve asFirst Painter to the King underLouis XIII andCardinal Richelieu, but soon returned to Rome and resumed his more traditional themes. In his later years he gave growing prominence to the landscape in his paintings. His work is characterized by clarity, logic, and order, and favors line over color. Until the 20th century he remained a major inspiration for such classically-oriented artists asJacques-Louis David,Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres andPaul Cézanne.
Details of Poussin's artistic training are somewhat obscure. Around 1612 he traveled to Paris, where he studied under minor masters and completed his earliest surviving works. His enthusiasm for the Italian works he saw in the royal collections in Paris motivated him to travel to Rome in 1624, where he studied the works of Renaissance andBaroque painters—especiallyRaphael, who had a powerful influence on his style. He befriended a number of artists who shared his classicizing tendencies, and met important patrons, such as CardinalFrancesco Barberini and the antiquarianCassiano dal Pozzo. The commissions Poussin received for modestly scaled paintings of religious, mythological, and historical subjects allowed him to develop his individual style in works such asThe Death of Germanicus,The Massacre of the Innocents, and the first of his two series of theSeven Sacraments.
He was persuaded to return to France in 1640 to be First Painter to the King but, dissatisfied with the overwhelming workload and the court intrigues, returned permanently to Rome after a little more than a year. Among the important works from his later years areOrion Blinded Searching for the Sun,Landscape with Hercules and Cacus, andThe Seasons.
Nicolas Poussin's early biographer was his friendGiovanni Pietro Bellori,[3] who relates that Poussin was born nearLes Andelys inNormandy and that he received an education that included some Latin, which would stand him in good stead. Another early friend and biographer,André Félibien, reported that "He was busy without cease filling his sketchbooks with an infinite number of different figures which only his imagination could produce."[4] His early sketches attracted the notice ofQuentin Varin, who passed some time in Andelys, but there is no mention by his biographers that he had a formal training in Varin's studio, though his later works showed the influence of Varin, particularly by their storytelling, accuracy of facial expression, finely painted drapery and rich colors.[5] His parents apparently opposed a painting career for him, and around 1612, at the age of eighteen, he ran away to Paris.[4]
He arrived in Paris during the regency ofMarie de' Medici, when art was flourishing as a result of the royal commissions given by Marie de' Medici for the decoration of herpalace, and by the rise of wealthy Paris merchants who bought art. There was also a substantial market for paintings in the redecoration of churches outside Paris destroyed during theFrench Wars of Religion, which had recently ended, and for the numerous convents in Paris and other cities. However, Poussin was not a member of the powerful guild of master painters and sculptors, which had a monopoly on most art commissions and brought lawsuits against outsiders like Poussin who tried to break into the profession.[6]
His early sketches gained him a place in the studios of established painters. He worked for three months in the studio of theFlemish painterFerdinand Elle, who painted almost exclusively portraits, a genre that was of little interest to Poussin.[7] Afterward, he is thought to have studied for one month in the studio ofGeorges Lallemand, but Lallemand's inattention to precise drawing and the articulation of his figures apparently displeased Poussin.[7] Moreover, Poussin did not fit well into the studio system, in which several painters worked on the same painting. Thereafter he preferred to work very slowly and alone.[6] Little is known of his life in Paris at this time. Court records show that he ran up considerable debts, which he was unable to pay. He studied anatomy and perspective, but the most important event of his first residence in Paris was his discovery of the royal art collections, thanks to his friendship with Alexandre Courtois, thevalet de chambre of Marie de' Medici. There he saw for the first time engravings of the works ofGiulio Romano and especially ofRaphael, whose work had an enormous influence on his future style.[8]
He first tried to travel to Rome in 1617 or 1618, but made it only as far asFlorence, where, as his biographer Bellori reported, "as a result of some sort of accident, he returned to France."[9][10] On his return, he began making paintings for Paris churches and convents. In 1622 made another attempt to go to Rome, but went only as far asLyon before returning. In the summer of the same year, he received his first important commission: the Order ofJesuits requested a series of six large paintings to honor the canonization of their founder, SaintFrancis Xavier. The originality and energy of these paintings (since lost) brought him a series of important commissions.[11]
Giambattista Marino, the court poet to Marie de' Medici, employed him to make a series of fifteen drawings, eleven illustratingOvid'sMetamorphoses[12] and four illustrating battle scenes from Roman history. The "Marino drawings", now atWindsor Castle, are among the earliest identifiable works of Poussin.[13] Marino's influence led to a commission for some decoration of Marie de' Medici's residence, theLuxembourg Palace, then a commission from the first Archbishop of Paris,Jean-François de Gondi, for a painting of the death of the Virgin (since lost) for the Archbishop's family chapel at the Cathedral ofNotre-Dame de Paris. Marino took him into his household, and, when he returned to Rome in 1623, invited Poussin to join him. Poussin remained in Paris to finish his earlier commissions, then arrived to Rome in the spring of 1624.[14]
Poussin was thirty when he arrived in Rome in 1624. The new Pope,Urban VIII, elected in 1623, was determined to maintain the position of Rome as the artistic capital of Europe, and artists from around the world gathered there. Poussin could visit the churches and convents to study the works ofRaphael and other Renaissance painters, as well as the more recent works ofCarracci,Guido Reni andCaravaggio (whose work Poussin detested, saying that Caravaggio was born to destroy painting).[15] He studied the art of painting nudes at the Academy ofDomenichino, and frequented theAccademia di San Luca, which brought together the leading painters in Rome, and whose head in 1624 was another French painter,Simon Vouet, who offered lodging to Poussin.[16]
Poussin became acquainted with other artists in Rome and tended to befriend those with classicizing artistic leanings: the French sculptorFrançois Duquesnoy whom he lodged with in 1626 in via dei Maroniti;[17] the French artistJacques Stella;Claude Lorraine; Domenichino;Andrea Sacchi; and joined an informal academy of artists and patrons opposed to the currentBaroque style that formed aroundJoachim von Sandrart.[18] Rome also offered Poussin a flourishing art market and an introduction to an important number of art patrons. Through Marino, he was introduced to CardinalFrancesco Barberini, the brother of the new Pope, and toCassiano dal Pozzo, the Cardinal's secretary and a passionate scholar of ancient Rome and Greece, who both later became his important patrons. The new art collectors demanded a different format of paintings; instead of large altarpieces and decoration for palaces, they wanted smaller-size religious paintings for private devotion or picturesque landscapes, mythological and history paintings.[15]
The early years of Poussin in Rome were difficult. His patron Marino departed Rome for Naples in May 1624, shortly after Poussin arrived, and died there in 1625. His other major sponsor, Cardinal Francesco Barberini, was named a papal legate to Spain and also departed soon afterwards, taking Cassiano dal Pozzo with him. Poussin became ill withsyphilis, but refused to go to the hospital, where the care was extremely poor, and he was unable to paint for months. He survived by selling the paintings he had for a fewscudi. Thanks to the assistance of a chef, Jacques Dughet, whose family took him in and cared for him, he largely recovered by 1629, and on 1 September 1630 he married Anne-Marie Dughet, the daughter of Dughet.[15][17] His two brothers-in-law were artists, andGaspard Dughet later took Poussin's surname.[19]
Cardinal Barberini and Cassiano dal Pozzo returned to Rome in 1626, and by their patronage Poussin received two major commissions. In 1627, Poussin paintedThe Death of Germanicus (Minneapolis Institute of Arts) for Cardinal Barberini. The painting's erudite use of ancient textual and visual sources (theHistories ofTacitus and the Meleager sarcophagus), stoic restraint and pictorial clarity established Poussin's reputation as a major artist.[20][21] In 1628, he was living on the via Paolino (Babuino) withJean le Maire.[17]
The success of the Germanicus led to an even more prestigious commission in 1628 for an altarpiece depicting theMartyrdom of St. Erasmus, for the Erasmus Chapel inSt. Peter's Basilica (now in theVatican Pinacoteca). TheFabricca di San Pietro had originally awarded the commission toPietro da Cortona, who had produced only preliminary designs for the altarpiece when he was unexpectedly transferred to another project. Thanks to Cassiano dal Pozzo's influence, Poussin was chosen to paint the Saint Erasmus altarpiece, following Pietro da Cortona's original design.
With its plunging diagonal composition and high narrative drama, theMartyrdom of St. Erasmus is Poussin's most overtly "baroque" work.[22] Despite its adherence to the pictorial idiom of the day, for unknown reasons, theMartyrdom of St. Erasmus seems to have met with official displeasure and generated no further papal commissions.[23] This disappointment, and the loss of a competition for a fresco cycle inSan Luigi dei Francesi, convinced Poussin to abandon the pursuit of large-scale, public commissions and the burdensome competitions, content restrictions, and political machinations they entailed. Instead, Poussin would re-orient his art towards private collectors, for whom he could work more slowly, with increasing control over subject matter and style.
Along with Cardinal Barberini and Cassiano dal Pozzo, for whom he painted the firstSeven Sacraments series, Poussin's early private patrons included the Chanoine Gian Maria Roscioli, who boughtThe Young Pyrrhus Saved and several other important works; CardinalGiulio Rospigliosi, for whom he painted the second version ofThe Shepherds of Arcadia; and CardinalLuigi Omodei, who received theTriumphs of Flora (c. 1630–32,Louvre). He painted theMassacre of the Innocents for the bankerVincenzo Giustiniani; the jewel thief and art swindler, Fabrizio Valguarnera, boughtPlague of Ashdod and commissionedThe Empire of Flora. He also received his first French commissions fromFrançois de Créquy, the French envoy to Italy, later, fromCardinal Richelieu for a series ofBacchanales.[24]
Buoyed by this commercial success, Poussin bought a life interest in a small house on Via Paolina (Babuino) for his wife and himself in 1632 and entered his most productive period.[24] His house was at the foot of Trinité des Monts, near the city gate, where other foreigners and artists lived; its exact location is not known but it was opposite the church ofSant'Atanasio dei Greci.[17]
Time defending Truth from the attacks of Envy and Discord, for the study ofCardinal Richelieu, 1642, Louvre
Frontispiece for the works ofVirgil for the royal printing house, 1641, Metropolitan Museum
As the work of Poussin became well known in Rome, he received invitations to return to Paris for important royal commissions, proposed byFrançois Sublet de Noyers, the Superintendent of theBâtiments du Roi forLouis XIII. When Poussin declined, Noyers sent his cousins, Roland Fréart de Chambray and Paul Fréart, to Rome to persuade Poussin to come home, offering him the title ofFirst Painter to the King, plus a substantial residence at theTuileries Palace. Poussin yielded, and in December 1640 he was back in Paris.[25]
The correspondence of Poussin to Cassiano dal Pozzo and his other friends in Rome show that he was appreciative of the money and honors, but he was quickly overwhelmed by a large number of commissions, particularly since he had taken the habit of working slowly and carefully. His new projects includedThe Institution of the Eucharist for the chapel of theChâteau de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, andThe Miracle of Saint Francis-Xavier for the altar of the church of the novitiate of the Jesuits. In addition, he was asked to the ceilings and vaults for theGrand Galerie of theLouvre Palace, and to paint a large allegorical work for the study of Cardinal Richelieu, on the themeTime Defending Truth from the Attacks of Envy and Discord, with the figure of "Truth" clearly standing for Cardinal Richelieu. He was also expected to provide designs for royal tapestries and the front pieces for books from the royal printing house. He was also subjected to considerable criticism from the partisans of other French painters, including his old friend Simon Vouet. He completed a painting of theLast Supper (now in the Louvre), eight cartoons for theGobelins tapestry manufactory, drawings for a proposed series ofgrisaille paintings of theLabors of Hercules for the Louvre, and a painting of theTriumph of Truth for Cardinal Richelieu (now in the Louvre). He was increasingly unhappy with the court intrigues and the overwhelming number of commissions. In the autumn of 1642, when the King and court were out of Paris inLanguedoc, he found a pretext to leave Paris and to return permanently to Rome.[26]
When he returned to Rome in 1642, he found the art world was in transition. Pope Urban VIII died in 1644, and the new Pope,Innocent X, was less interested in art patronage, and preferred Spanish over French culture. Poussin's great patrons, theBarberinis, departed Rome for France. He still had a few important patrons in Rome, including Cassiano dal Pozzo and the future CardinalCamillo Massimi, but began to paint more frequently for the patrons he had found in Paris. Cardinal Richelieu died in 1642, and Louis XIII died in 1643, and Poussin's Paris sponsor, Sublet de Noyer, lost his position, but Richelieu's successor,Cardinal Mazarin, began to collect Poussin's works. In October 1643, Poussin sold the furnishings of his house in theTuileries in Paris, and settled for the rest of his life in Rome.[27]
In 1647,André Félibien, the secretary of the French Embassy in Rome, became a friend and painting student of Poussin, and published the first book devoted entirely to his work. His growing number of French patrons included the Abbé Louis Fouquet, brother ofNicolas Fouquet, the celebratedSuperintendent of Finances of the youngLouis XIV. In 1655 Fouquet obtained for Poussin official recognition of his earlier title as First Painter of the King, along with payment for his past French commissions. To thank Fouquet, Poussin made designs for the baths Fouquet was constructing at his château atVaux-le-Vicomte.[28]
Another important French patron of Poussin in this period wasPaul Fréart de Chantelou, who came to Rome in 1643 and stayed there for several months. He commissioned from Poussin some of his most important works, including the second series of theSeven Sacraments, painted between 1644 and 1648, and hisLandscape with Diogenes.[29] In 1649 he painted theVision of St Paul for the comic poetPaul Scarron, and in 1651 theHoly Family forCharles III de Créquy. Landscapes had been a secondary feature of his early work; in his later work nature and the landscape was frequently the central element of the painting.[30]
He lived an austere and comfortable life, working slowly and apparently without assistants. The painterCharles Le Brun joined him in Rome for three years, and Poussin's work had a major influence on Le Brun's style. In 1647, his patrons Chantelou and Pointel requested portraits of Poussin. He responded by making two self-portraits, completed together in 1649.[31]
He suffered from declining health after 1650, and was troubled by a worsening tremor in his hand, evidence of which is apparent in his late drawings.[32] Nonetheless, in his final eight years he painted some of the most ambitious and celebrated of his works, includingThe Birth of Bacchus,Orion Blinded Searching for the Sun,Landscape with Hercules and Cacus, the four paintings ofThe Seasons andApollo in love with Daphné.
His wife Anne-Marie died in 1664, and thereafter his own health sank rapidly. On 21 September he dictated his will, and he died in Rome on 19 November 1665 and was buried in the church ofSan Lorenzo in Lucina.[33]
Each of Poussin's paintings told a story. Though he had little formal education, Poussin became very knowledgeable in the nuances of religious history, mythology and classical literature, and, usually after consulting with his clients, took his subjects from these topics. Many of his paintings combined several different incidents, occurring at different times, into the same painting, in order to tell the story, and theaffetti, or facial expressions of the participants, showed their different reactions.[34] Aside from his self-portraits, Poussin never painted contemporary subjects.[35]
Religion was the most common subject of his paintings, as the church was the most important art patron in Rome and because there was a growing demand by wealthy patrons for devotional paintings at home. He took a large part of his themes from theOld Testament, which offered more variety and the stories were often more vague and gave him more freedom to invent. He painted different versions of the stories ofEliazer andRebecca from theBook of Genesis and made three versions ofMoses saved from the waters. TheNew Testament provided the subject of one of his most dramatic paintings, "The Massacre of the Innocents", where the general slaughter was reduced to a single brutal incident. In hisJudgement of Solomon (1649), the story can be read in the varied facial expressions of the participants.[34]
His religious paintings were sometimes criticized by his rivals for their variation from tradition. His painting of Christ in the sky in his painting of Saint Francis-Xavier was criticized by partisans ofSimon Vouet for having "Too much pride, and resembling the god Jupiter more than a God of Mercy". Poussin responded that "he could not and should not imagine a Christ, no matter what he is doing, looking like a gentle father, considering that, when he was on earth among men, it was difficult to look him in the face".[36]
The most famous of his religious works were the two series calledThe Seven Sacraments, representing the meaning of the moral laws behind each of the principal ceremonies of the church, illustrated by incidents in the life of Christ. The first series was painted in Rome by his major early patron,Cassiano dal Pozzo, and was finished in 1642. It was viewed by his later patron,Paul Fréart de Chantelou, who asked for a copy. Instead of making copies, Poussin painted an entirely new series of paintings, which was finished by 1647. The new series had less of the freshness and originality of the first series, but was striking for its simplicity and austerity in achieving its effects; the second series illustrated his mastery of the balance of the figures, the variety of expressions, and the juxtaposition of colors.[37]
Classical Greek and Roman mythology, history and literature provided the subjects for many of his paintings, particularly during his early years in Rome. His first successful painting in Rome,The Death of Germanicus, was based upon a story in theAnnals ofTacitus. In his early years he devoted a series of paintings, full of color, movement and sensuality, to the Bacchanals, colorful portrayals of ceremonies devoted to the god of wineBacchus, and celebrating the goddessesVenus andFlore. He also createdThe Birth of Venus (1635), telling the story of the Roman goddess through an elaborate composition full of dynamic figures for the French patron,Cardinal Richelieu, who had also commissioned the Bacchanals.[38] Many of his mythological paintings featured gardens and floral themes; his first Roman patrons, the Barberini family, had one of largest and most famous gardens in Rome. Another of his early major themes was theRape of the Sabine Women, recounting how the King of Rome,Romulus, wanting wives for his soldiers, invited the members of the neighboring Sabine tribe for a festival, and then, on his signal, kidnapped all of the women. He painted two versions, one in 1634, now in theMetropolitan Museum of Art, and the other in 1637, now in the Louvre. He also painted two versions illustrating a story ofOvid in theMetamorphoses in which Venus mourning the death ofAdonis after a hunting accident, transforms his blood into the color of theanemone flower.
Throughout his career, Poussin frequently achieved what the art historianWillibald Sauerländer terms a "consonance ... between the pagan and the Christian world".[39] An example isThe Four Seasons (1660–64), in which Christian and pagan themes are mingled:Spring, traditionally personified by the Roman goddessFlora, instead features Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden;Summer is symbolized not byCeres but by the biblicalRuth.[39]
In his later years, his mythological paintings became more somber, and often introduced the symbols of mortality and death. The last painting he was working on before his death wasApollo in love with Daphne, which he presented to his patron, the future Cardinal Massimi, in 1665. The figures on the left of the canvas, around Apollo, largely represented vitality and life, while those on the right, around Daphne, were symbols of sterility and death. He was unable to complete the painting because of the trembling of his hand, and the figures on the right are unfinished.[40]
Besides classical literature and myth, he drew often from works of the romantic and heroic literature of his own time, usually subjects decided in advance with his patrons. He painted scenes from the epic poemJerusalem Delivered byTorquato Tasso (1544–1595), published in 1581, and one of the most popular books in Poussin's lifetime. His paintingRenaud and Armide illustrated the death of the Christian knight Renaud at the hands of the magician Armide; who, when she saw his face, saw her hatred turn to love. Another poem by Tasso with a similar theme inspiredTancred and Hermiene; a woman finds a wounded knight on the road, breaks down in tears, then finds the strength through love to heal him.[41]
Allegories of death are common in Poussin's work. One of the best-known examples isEt in Arcadia ego, a subject he painted in about 1630 and again in the late 1630s. Idealized shepherds examine a tomb inscribed with the title phrase, "Even inArcadia I exist", reminding that death was ever-present.[42]
A fertile source for Poussin was Cardinal Giulio Rospigliosi, who wrote moralistic theatrical pieces which were staged at thePalazzo Barberini, for his early patron. One of his most famous works,A Dance to the Music of Time, was inspired by another Rospigliosi piece. According to his early biographers Bellori and Felibien, the four figures in the dance represent the stages of life: Poverty leads to Work, Work to Riches, and Riches to Luxury; then, following Christian doctrine, luxury leads back to poverty, and the cycle begins again. The three women and one man who dance represent the different stages and are distinguished by their different clothing and headdresses, ranging from plain to jeweled. In the sky over the dancing figures, the chariot of Apollo passes, accompanied by the Goddess Aurora and the Hours, a symbol of passing time.[42]
Poussin is an important figure in the development oflandscape painting. In his early paintings the landscape usually forms a graceful background for a group of figures, but later the landscape played a larger and larger role and dominated the figures, illustrating stories, usually tragic, taken from the Bible, mythology, ancient history or literature. His landscapes were very carefully composed, with the vertical trees and classical columns carefully balanced by the horizontal bodies of water and flat building stones, all organized to lead the eye to the often tiny figures. The foliage in his trees and bushes is very carefully painted, often showing every leaf. His skies played a particularly important part, from the blue skies and gray clouds with bright sunlit borders (a sight often called in France "a Poussin sky") to illustrate scenes of tranquility and the serenity of faith, such as theLandscape with Saint John on Patmos, painted in the late 1630s before his departure for Paris; or extremely dark, turbulent and threatening, as a setting for tragic events, as in hisLandscape with Pyramus and Thisbe (1651). Many of his landscapes have enigmatic elements noticeable only with closer inspection; for example, in the center of the landscape with Pyramus and Thisbe, despite the storm in the sky, the surface of the lake is perfectly calm, reflecting the trees.[43]
Between 1650 and 1655, Poussin also painted a series of paintings now often called "townscapes", where classical architecture replaces trees and mountains in the background. The paintingThe Death of Saphire uses this setting to illustrate two stories simultaneously; in the foreground, the wife of a wealthy merchant dies after being chastised by St. Peter for not giving more money to the poor; while in the background another man, more generous, gives alms to a beggar.[43]
Throughout his life Poussin stood apart from the popular tendency toward the decorative in French art of his time. In Poussin's works a survival of the impulses of theRenaissance is coupled with conscious reference to the art ofclassical antiquity as the standard of excellence.[44] Rejecting the emotionalism of Baroque artists such asBernini andPietro da Cortona, he emphasized the cerebral.[45] His goal was clarity of expression achieved bydisegno or 'nobility of design' in preference tocolore or color.[46]
In contrast to the warm and atmospheric style of his early paintings, Poussin by the 1630s developed a cooler palette, a drier touch, and a more stage-like presentation of figures dispersed within a well defined space.[12] InThe Triumph of David (c. 1633–34;Dulwich Picture Gallery), the figures enacting the scene are arranged in rows that, like the architectural facade that serves as the background, are parallel to the picture plane.[12] The violence ofThe Rape of the Sabine Women (c. 1638; Louvre) has the same abstract, choreographed quality seen inA Dance to the Music of Time (1639–40).[12]
Contrary to the standard studio practice of his time, Poussin did not make detailed figure drawings as preparation for painting, and he seems not to have used assistants in the execution of his paintings.[12] He produced few drawings as independent works, aside from the series of drawings illustrating Ovid'sMetamorphoses he made early in his career. His drawings, typically in pen andink wash, include landscapes drawn from nature to be used as references for painting, and composition studies in which he blocked in his figures and their settings. To aid him in formulating his compositions he made miniature wax figures and arranged them in a box that was open on one side like a theatre stage, to serve as models for his composition sketches.[48]Pierre Rosenberg described Poussin as "not a brilliant, elegant, or seductive draughtsman. Far from it. His lack of virtuosity is, however, compensated for by uncompromising rigour: there is never an irrelevant mark or a superfluous line."[49]
In the years following Poussin's death, his style had a strong influence on French art, thanks in particular toCharles Le Brun, who had studied briefly with Poussin in Rome, and who, like Poussin, became a court painter for the King and later the head of theFrench Academy in Rome. Poussin's work had an important influence on the 17th-century paintings ofJacques Stella andSébastien Bourdon, the Italian painterPier Francesco Mola, and the Dutch painterGerard de Lairesse.[50]A debate emerged in the art world between the advocates of Poussin's style, who said the drawing was the most important element of a painting, and the advocates of Rubens, who placed color above the drawing.[51] During theFrench Revolution, Poussin's style was championed byJacques-Louis David in part because the leaders of the Revolution looked to replace the frivolity of French court art with Republican severity and civic-mindedness. The influence of Poussin was evident in paintings such asBrutus andDeath of Marat.Benjamin West, an American painter of the 18th century who worked in Britain, found inspiration for his canvas ofThe Death of General Wolfe in Poussin'sThe Death of Germanicus.[52]
The 19th century brought a resurgence of enthusiasm for Poussin. French writers were seeking to create a national art movement and Poussin became one of their heroes: the founding father of the French School; he appears in plays, stories and novels as well asphysiognomic studies.[17] He also became the model for the myth of the child genius, who becomes the miserable artist rejected by society, as can be seen inFrançois Marius Granet's painting of the death of Poussin.[17] One of his greatest admirers wasIngres, who studied in Rome and became Director of the French Academy there. Ingres wrote, "Only great painters of history can paint a beautiful landscape. He (Poussin) was the first, and only, to capture the nature of Italy. By the character and taste of his compositions, he proved that such nature belonged to him; so much so that when facing a beautiful site, one says, and says correctly, that it is "Poussinesque".[53] Another 19th-century admirer of Poussin was Ingres' great rival,Eugène Delacroix; he wrote in 1853: "The life of Poussin is reflected in his works; it is in perfect harmony with the beauty and nobility of his inventions...Poussin was one of the greatest innovators found in the history of painting. He arrived in the middle of the school of mannerism, where the craft was preferred to the intellectual role of art. He broke with all of that falseness".[54]
Paul Cézanne appreciated Poussin's version of classicism. "Imagine how Poussin entirely redid nature, that is the classicism that I mean. What I don't accept is the classicism that limits you. I want that a visit to a master will help me find myself. Every time I leave a Poussin, I know better who I am."[54] Cézanne was described in 1907 byMaurice Denis as "the Poussin of Impressionism".[55]Georges Seurat was anotherPost-Impressionist artist who admired the formal qualities of Poussin's work.[56]
In the 20th century, some art critics suggested that the analyticCubist experiments ofPablo Picasso andGeorges Braque were also founded upon Poussin's example.[57] In 1963 Picasso based a series of paintings on Poussin'sThe Rape of the Sabine Women. Following in Picasso's footsteps,Herman Braun-Vega produced a series of twenty paintings in 1974 onThe Rape of the Sabine Women in the Louvre, which he placed in perspective with the tragic events of his time.[58] One of the paintings in this series,Poussin au quartier de porc, is part of the collection of theCentre National des Arts Plastiques.[59]André Derain,[60]Jean Hélion,[61]Balthus,[62] andJean Hugo were other modern artists who acknowledged the influence of Poussin.Markus Lüpertz made a series of paintings in 1989–90 based on Poussin's works.[63]
^Carrier, David. "Poussin's Cartesian Meditations: Self and Other in the Self-Portraits of Poussin and Matisse".Notes in the History of Art, vol. 15, no. 3, 1996, pp. 28–35.
^Jouffroy, Alain (December 1975)."Herman Braun-Vega : la critique peinte" [Herman Braun-Vega: the painted criticism].XXe siècle (in French) (45).La série de peintures [...] consacrée à l'Enlèvement des Sabines de Poussin, [...] où il introduit l'information actuelle [...] dans un espace illusionniste où les personnages de Poussin sont analysés, [...] et resitués, parfois, dans le contexte des rues du Paris actuel, développe une véritable critique peinte sur les rapports et les oppositions [...] entre l'espace pictural traditionnel et la réalité contemporaine.
^Cowling, Elizabeth; Jennifer Mundy (1990).On Classic Ground: Picasso, Léger, de Chirico and the New Classicism 1910–1930. London: Tate Gallery. pp. 93–93.ISBN1-854-37043-X.
^Ottinger, Didier (2005).Jean Hélion. London: Paul Holberton. pp. 20–21.ISBN1-903470-27-7
^Rewald, Sabine (1984).Balthus. New York: Harry N. Abrams. p. 82.ISBN0870993666.
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Keazor, Henry (1998).Poussins Parerga. Quellen, Entwicklung und Bedeutung der Kleinkompositionen in den Gemälden Nicolas Poussins. Schnell & Steiner, Regensburg.ISBN3-7954-1146-7
Unglaub, Jonathan (2006).Poussin and the Poetics of Painting: Pictorial Narrative and the Legacy of Tasso. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006.ISBN978-0-521-83367-7
Paris 1960. "Poussin peintre: retrospectif". Galvanized the renewed interest in Poussin.
Fort Worth 1988. "Poussin: The Early Years in Rome: The Origins of French Classicism".
Paris 1994. "Nicolas Poussin 1594–1665" Grand Palais.
New York City 2008.Poussin and Nature: Arcadian Visions". Metropolitan Museum of Art; Poussin's landscapes; companion exhibit "In the Light of Poussin: The Classical Landscape Tradition".
London 2021. "Poussin a[1]nd the Dance". National Gallery of Art