Page 25 - G19C Maastricht Catalog
P. 25

Fernand Pelez

 YOUNG BEGGAR WITH HAT (PETIT MISÈRE)


 In December 1913, just a few months after Fernand Pelez’s death,   Pelez’s fascination with naturalistically depicting the pathos and
 an exhibition of his most important works was held in his studio   vulnerability of the urban lower classes distinguishes him from
 at the foot of Montmartre in Paris. A reproduction of this painting   his more well-remembered contemporaries such as Jules Bastien-
 depicting a young street urchin wearing a grown-man’s threadbare   Lepage whose naturalistically depicted the laboring classes in rural,
 jacket and holding an equally oversized bourgeois top hat, his   rather than urban, milieus. Some scholars have compared Pelez’s
 delicate skin tones overlaid with a veil of dirt, adorned the cover of   works to contemporaneous images of the urban lower classes by
 the catalogue. It was accompanied by a single word: “misère.”  Georges Seurat, Edgar Degas, and Henri Toulouse-Lautrec, however
 their stylistic concerns differ considerably. Known widely in his
 While this term in French usually translates as simply physical   day, this artist working on the fringes of the Parisian avant-garde
 poverty, in the 19th century “misère,” as Linda Nochlin has shown,   occupies an incomparable position as the chronicler of the Belle
 connoted a condition of “poverty felt morally" and bearing upon   Époque’s other side – its marginalized, its destitute, its down-and-
 all humanity. First shown at the Salon of 1886, this painting   out, and its forgotten. It is for this reason that recent interest has
 entitled Petit Misère, combines meticulous detail with emotional   been revived and collected around the spectacular paintings of
 distance so as to elicit a broadly sympathetic view of the conditions   Fernand Pelez who, in 1901, described each of his works such as Petit
 of the industrial underclass. Rather than depicting a narrative   Misère as individual pages in the book describing Paris’ misérables.
 scene, misery is here conveyed through the young boy’s physical
 appearance, his scavenged and tattered clothing, and physical
 proximity to the viewer in the shallow space of the picture. Lacking
 the idealization of the history painting or religious martyr scenes
 upon which he was trained, Pelez painted this figure naturalistically
 and almost as if “there is mud in his brush,” as the critic Émile
 Henriot described it. The young boy stands in the doorway of
 Pelez’s studio at 62 Boulevard de Clichy, appearing as though the
 artist had just encountered this familiar figure on the street. Yet his
 vacant stare combined with the thin, flat application of paint in a
 retrained, neutral palette suggests that perhaps this figure represents
 one of Paris’ most recognizable types – the gamin, or the street
 urchin – rather than a distinct individual. A favorite trope in visual
 and literary discourse of the later 19th century, the gamin was so
 thoroughly embedded in the legibility of the modern city that Victor
 Hugo proclaimed in the 1862 novel, Les Misérables, that “[T]he gamin
 stands for Paris.”











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