Jean-Marie Reignier: Tailpiece for Bonvin Album

Jean-Marie Reignier (French, 1815-1886), Tailpiece for Bonvin Album, 1867, watercolor on smooth, moderately-thick, blue-coated, cream wove paper, The Walters Art Museum

“In 1866 William T. Walters commissioned a deluxe album from French art dealer Georges Petit (1856–1920) to house his growing collection of watercolors by the French watercolorist Léon Bonvin (1834-1866). …For his album, Walters commissioned a decorative frontispiece and tailpiece from the flower painter Jean-Marie Reignier; these were completed by early 1867. Reignier’s tailpiece in particular frames Bonvin as a tragic and romantic figure. An oval plaque inscribed with the artist’s name and the year of his death is shown split across the middle. Around this are flowers arranged roughly in the form a cross. For Victorians, poppies often stood for consolation, sleep, and death; roses for love; ivy for memory and mourning; while the brambles may signify remorse. A flower falls across the artist’s palette, which rests atop the plaque, the colors of its petals reflected in the paint laid out there, suggesting the interrelation of art and nature in Bonvin’s work.”

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Many watercolor masters throughout history utilized opaque watercolor or gouache in their work. In this video, artist Jill Poyerd explores this transparency level and how opaque paint was used in historic watercolor paintings.

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~Sunnyside

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