La Liberté invitant les artistes à prendre part à la 22e exposition des artistes indépendants

Henri Rousseau · PD

La Liberté invitant les artistes à prendre part à la 22e exposition des artistes indépendants


Détails

Année
1905
Technique
huile sur toile
Type
peinture
Dimensions
175 × 118 cm

L'histoire

By 1905 the Salon des Independants had been running for about 20 years on one promise: no jury, no prizes, anyone who paid the fee could hang their work. For Henri Rousseau, a retired Paris customs official who had taught himself to paint and was mocked by critics for it, that open door meant everything. Here he turned the exhibition itself into a myth. The figure of Liberty floats above a park with a trumpet, summoning painters who file in carrying their canvases, while a tame lion sits calmly beside the path. The style is the flat, deliberate manner the official salons sneered at and younger artists like Picasso would soon prize. Rousseau was in his sixties and still barely selling, painting the welcome he wished the art world had given him.

La Liberté invitant les artistes à prendre part à la 22e exposition des artistes indépendants — Henri Rousseau — MuseScope