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Post-Impressionism

James Sidney Ensor

 

 

James Sidney Ensor

born: Ostend, Belgium; 13 April 1860
died: Ostend, Belgium; 19 November 1949

 

Ensor's father was a British engineer and his mother was from Ostend, Belgium. Ostend was a small seaside resort town. His mother supported the family by running a souvenir and gift shop. The shop sold Chinese goods, seashells, and Carnival masks, elements that play a strong part in Ensor's art.

Ensor's sister, Mariette, was born about a year after him.

At Sixteen Ensor was already showing his talent for art. These two pictures are made with oil paint on cardboard packing from his mother's gift shop, in Ostend, Belgium.

 

 

Ensor: Flemish Flats Seen from the Dunes

Flemish Flats
Seen from the Dunes

1876
Private Collection

Ensor: Bathing House

Bathing House
1876
Koninklijk Museum
Antwerp, Belgium

 

In 1876, Ensor moved to Brussels to study at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts. Meets the Rousseau family, who will play a major stabilizing part in his life. This family is not related to the artistic Rouseaus, but they were prominent in Brussels and provided a way for Ensor to meet the intellectual and anarchist personalities of those early days of Belgian independence.

When Ensor, age 20, returned to Ostend, he was already a master painter. In his period he preferred a style similar to Rembrandt or at times Rubens.

 

 

Ensor: The Lampboy

The Lampboy
1880
Musées Royaux
Brussels, Belgium

Ensor: The Bourgeois Salon

The Bourgeois
Salon

1881
Koninklijk Museum
Antwerp, Belgium

Ensor: Still Life with a Duck

Still Life
with a Duck

1880
Musée des Beaux-Arts
Tournai, France

 

 

Ensor: The Artist's Father

The Artist's Father
1881
Musées Royaux
Brussels, Belgium

 

 

 Ensor: The Oyster Eater

The Oyster Eater
1882
Koninklijk Museum
Antwerp, Belgium

Ensor: The Somber Lady

The Somber Lady
1881
Musées Royaux
Brussels, Belgium

 

The Oyster Eater was rejected by the Antwerp Salon in 1882 and the Brussels Salon in 1884. In 1882 he displays his art in the Paris Salon and with "L'Essor", a Brussels art society. A critic calls his work "trash".

Unhappy with his rejections, in 1883, Ensor joined a group of forward looking artists called Les Vingt (The Twenty). The group in the following years held their own exhibitions and Ensor's work was frequently included.

 

Ensor: Ldy in Distress

Lady in Distress
1882
Musée d'Orsay
Paris, France

Ensor: Drunkards

Drunkards
1883
Collection Crédit Communal
Brasses, Belgium

Ensor: The Rower

The Rower
1883
Koninklijk Museum
Antwerp, Belgium

Ensor: Scandalized Masks

Scandalized Masks
1883
Musées Royaux
Brussels, Belgium

 

Ensor: Self with Flowered Hat

Self with Flowered Hat
Self: 1883
Hat: 1888
Ostend Museum
Ostend, Belgium


About 1885 he began to find his own style. His material changed to images of fantasy and death — using masks and skeletons. He went back and reworked pictures adding grotesque elements. In 1886 he began to do etchings.

 

 

 

ensor: The Great and Glorious Entry of Christ into Jerusalem

The Great and Glorious Entry
of Christ into Jersalem
1885
Museum of Fine Art
Ghent, Belgium

Ensor: Fans and Stuffs

Fans and Stuffs
1885
Kunsthaus
Zürich, Switzerland

Ensor: Nude at a Balustrade

Nude at a Balustrade
1886
Private Collection

Ensor: The Cathedral

The Cathedral
1886
[etching]

 

The new turn to Ensor's work was far too revolutionary, even for Les Vingt. The Great and Glorious Entry caused contraversy within Les Vingt and at the Les Vignt salon of 1887. These artistic disagreements, led to Ensor's being increasingly isolated.

His father and his maternal grandmother both died in 1887. And Ensor's dark drawing period came to an end. He moved into light-hued fantasy pictures. About this same time, Ensor developed a hatred of the crowd, the masses who accepted authority and had no taste, and it became a major theme expressed in his art.

 

 

Ensor: Tribulations of St. Anthony

Tribulations of St. Anthony
1887
Museum of Modern Art
New York, NY, US

 

 

Ensor: Photo of Ensor at age 28

Photo of Ensor, age 28
1888

Ensor: My Portrait in 1960

My Portrait in 1960
1888
[Etching]

 

In 1888, he met an innkeeper's daughter, Augusta Bogaerts, who will remain his friend for the rest of his life.

In 1889, Les Vingt rejected Ensor's masterpiece The Entry of Christ into Brussels in 1889; they also consider expelling him from the group.

 

Ensor: Skeletons Trying to Keep Warm

Skeletons Trying
to Keep Warm

1889
Kimbell Art Museum
Fort Worth, TX, US

Ensor: Fall of the Rebelious Angels

Fall of the
Rebelious Angels

1889
Koninklijk Museum
Antwerp, Belgium

Ensor: Doctrinaire Nourishment

Doctrinaire Nourishment
1889
[etching]

 

Ensor turns thirty.

Ensor: Baths at Ostend

Baths at Ostend
1890
Private Collection

 

 

Ensor: The Intrigue

The Intrigue
1890
Koninklijk Museum
Antwerp, Belgium

Ensor: Two Skeletons fighting over a Smoked Herring

Two Skeletons fighting
over a Smoked Herring
1891
Musées Royaux
Brussels, Belgium

Ensor: Strange Masks

Strange Masks
[detail]
1892
Musées Royaux
Brussels, Belgium

Ensor: Man of Sorrows

Man of Sorrows
1892
Koninklijk Museum
Antwerp, Belgium

 

In 1893 Les Vingt holds its final exhibition. Les Vingt is disbanded and a new group "La Libre Esthetique" is founded to replace it. Ensor feeling completely isolated attempts to sell his studio and all its contents for 8,500 francs, but no one is willing to buy.

In 1895, Ensor's luck begins to change. A Brussels museum buys The Lampboy and some drawings and etchings. His first one man exhibition is held in Brussels.

 

Ensor: [etching] Christ's Decent into Hell

Christ's Decent into Hell
1895
[etching]

Ensor: [etching] Death Pursuing a Flock of Mortals

Death Pursuing a
Flock of Mortals

1896
[etching]

 

In 1898, Ensor has his first one man show in Paris at "Salon des Cent" and in the following year there is a showing of his work in Ostend. A Vienna museum buys about a hundred of his etchings.

 

Ensor: Death and the Masks 1897

Death and the Masks
1897
City Museum of Modern Art
Liege, Belgium

 

Ensor: Ensor with Masks

Ensor with Masks
1899
Private Collection

Ensor: Death and the Masks 1900

Death and the Masks
1900

 

In 1900 Ensor turns forty and in 1903 he is named a Knight of the Order of Leopold. His period of creativity and insolence, sparked by the rejections of critics and the public is mostly over.

 

The Seven Deadly Sins

(etchings with hand coloring)
a complete set can be viewed at Ostend Museum, Ostend, Belgium

Ensor: Seven Deadly Sins - Frontspiece

Frontspiece
Seven Deadly Sins Dominated by Death
1904

Ensor: Seven Deadly Sins - Laziness

Laziness

Ensor: Seven Deadly Sins - Gluttony

Gluttony

Ensor: Seven Deadly Sins - Arogance

Arrogance

Ensor: Seven Deadly Sins - Envy

Envy

Ensor: Seven Deadly Sins - Greed

Greed

Ensor: Seven Deadly Sins - Lust

Lust

Ensor: Seven Deadly Sins - Anger

Anger

 

In 1911, Ensor writes the libretto, composes the music, and designs the sets for a marionette play: La Gamme d'Amour. During the first world war Ensor remains in Ostend and is arrested for insulting the Kaiser. His mother dies in 1915.

 

Ensor: Chinoiseries

Chinoiseries
1907
Museum Dhondt Dhaenens
Deurle, Belgium

Ensor: Artist's Mother in Death

Artist's Mother in Death
1915
Ostend Museum
Ostend, Belgium

 

In 1920, just after the first world war, Ensor turns sixty and has his first major retrospective in Galerie Girous in Brussels.

In 1929, his “Entry of Christ into Brussels”, done 40 years earlier, is first exhibited publicly, King Albert of Belgium makes him a Baron.

 

 Ensor: Christ's Entry into Brussels in 1889

 Ensor: Christ's Entry into Brussles  -- detail 1

 Ensor: Christ's Entry into Brussels  -- detail 2

Christ's Entry into Brussels in 1889
1888
Getty Center
Los Angeles

 

 

Ensor: Christ's Entry into Brussles - etching

Christ's Entry into Brussels
[etching]

 

 

Ensor: Carnival in Flanders

Carnival in Flanders
after 1920
Kuntshaus
Zurich, Switzerland

Ensor: Artist and the Masks

Artist and Masks
1937
Museum of Art
Philadelphia, PA, US

 

In 1949, after a short illness, James Ensor, 89, dies and is buried in a cemetery in Mariakerke, not far from Ostend.

 

 

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2003-03-02