- Jean-Julien Lemordant
Jean-Julien Lemordant (1882
St. Malo -1968Paris ) was a Breton artist and French soldier and patriot.Life
Lemordant grew up in
Brittany and was orphaned in his teens. [ [http://musee-beauxarts.quimper.fr/htcoib/fjlemor.htm LEMORDANT Jean-Julien ] ] At first he studied architecture but made his career as a painter, initially in Rennes and later in Paris, studying underLéon Bonnat at the Beaux-Arts.The life of
Brittany figured prominently in his early paintings, including his paintings for the Hôtel de l'Epée dining rooms at Quimper, and for the ceiling of the Theatre of Rennes. He was associated withCharles Cottet , and his influences included Gauguin, the Fauves, and the School of Pont-Aven. When his work was exhibited inParis , it was to broad critical acclaim.Blindness
At the outset of
World War I , in August 1914, he volunteered forFrance and was sent to the front as a private. He was wounded atCharleroi and promoted to lieutenant. In October 1915 he was again wounded, at the battle of Artois, and further wounds in the same battle left him blind. He was left for four days, thought dead, then was taken as prisoner to Germany. He was eventually exchanged and returned to France throughSwitzerland . [Anna Seaton Schmidt, "Jean Julien Lemordant", "The American Magazine of Art", vol. X, #10, August 1919, pp. 363-369.] [Gustave Geffroy & Charles Le Goffic, "Jean-Julien Lemordant, peintre et soldat", Yale University School of Fine Arts, 1919.]Embraced as a victim of German "Kultur", Lemordant became an inspirational speaker, talking about the effects of his blindness, and the role of the artist in society. He believed that France was victorious over
Germany because a series of great artists (Carrière, Sisley, Pissarro, Puvis de Chavannes and Rodin) had kept the spirit of art and sacrifice alive in France. In 1919 he was awarded theHowland Memorial Prize and his works were exhibited atYale University ; the retrospective exhibit also was shown at the Gimple and Wildenstein Galleries in New York, ["The New York Times,23 March 1919 .] and toured the United States under the auspices of the American Federation of Art. In 1926, he was made a Commandeur of the Légion d'Honneur, and was carried through theGrand Palais on the shoulders of the greatest artist of the day.Lemordant was made Professor of Esthetics at the École des Beaux-Arts, for life.
In 1927, he acquired a site on the Avenue-René-Coty, and designed, with the assistance of Jean Launay, the Hôtel Lemordant to be erected there. His living quarters contained a huge, naturally lit studio, which, being blind, he never used. [Andrew Ayers, "The Architecture of Paris", Edition Axel Menges, Stuttgart, 2004, pp. 219-220. ISBN 3-930698-96-X]
Later years
Fifty years after his injuries, a series of operations restored his sight.
Ironically, Lemordant died of
tear-gas poisoning in the May 1968 student uprisings in Paris.External links
* [http://musee-beauxarts.quimper.fr/htcoib/fjlemor.htm some of his works]
* [http://www.parisenimages.fr/en/popup-photo.html?photo=18766-2 photograph of the Hôtel Lemordant]References
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