James Ensor  

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 +"Aan de poort van het [[Flemish expressionism|ekspressionisme in Vlaanderen]] moet men in reusachtige letters ‘[[James Ensor]]’ schrijven, gelijk men onvoorwaardelik ‘[[Cézanne]]’ schrijven moet vóór een absolute beweging als het frans kubisme."--"[[Ekspressionisme in Vlaanderen]]" (1918) by Paul van Ostaijen
 +<hr>
 +"La parenté entre [[Manet]] et [[James Ensor]] n'est pas moins frappante. Dans ''[[le Lampiste]]'', un gamin habillé de noir, qui arrange une grande lanterne, s'enlève sur une muraille gris perle. C'est une variante du [[The Fifer|fifre de Manet]]."--''[[La peinture belge au XIXe siècle|Die belgische Malerei im neunzehnten Jahrhundert]]'' (1904) by Richard Muther
 +<hr>
 +"[[James Ensor |Ensor]], too, illustrated works by [[Poe]]." --''[[The Grotesque in Art and Literature]]'' (1957) by Wolfgang Kayser
 +|}
{{Template}} {{Template}}
 +'''James Ensor''' (1860 – 1949) was a [[Belgian painter]] and [[Printmaking|printmaker]] known for such works as
 +''[[The Oyster Eater (Ensor)|The Oyster Eater]]'' (1882),
 +''[[Christ's Entry Into Brussels in 1889]]'' (1888–89) and
 +''[[The Bad Doctors]]'' (1892),
 +''[[The Dangerous Cooks]]'' (1896).
 +==Biography==
 +Ensor's father, James Frederic Ensor, born in [[Brussels]] to [[English people|English]] parents, was a cultivated man who studied engineering in England and Germany. Ensor's mother, Maria Catherina Haegheman, was Belgian. Ensor himself lacked interest in academic study and left school at the age of fifteen to begin his artistic training with two local painters. From 1877 to 1880, he attended the [[Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts]] in [[Brussels]], where one of his fellow students was [[Fernand Khnopff]]. Ensor first exhibited his work in 1881. From 1880 until 1917, he had his studio in the attic of his parents' house. His travels were very few: three brief trips to France and two to the Netherlands in the 1880s, and a four-day trip to London in 1892.
-'''James Ensor''' (13 April 1860&nbsp;&ndash; 19 November 1949) was a [[Belgian painter]] and [[printmaker]], an important influence on [[expressionism]] and [[surrealism]] who lived in [[Ostend]] for almost his entire life. He was associated with the artistic group [[Les XX]].+During the late 19th century, much of Ensor's work was rejected as scandalous, particularly his painting ''[[Christ's Entry Into Brussels in 1889]]'' (1888–89). The Belgian art critic [[Octave Maus]] famously summed up the response from contemporaneous art critics to Ensor's innovative (and often scathingly political) work: "Ensor is the leader of a clan. Ensor is the limelight. Ensor sums up and concentrates certain principles which are considered to be anarchistic. In short, Ensor is a dangerous person who has great changes. ... He is consequently marked for blows. It is at him that all the [[Arquebus|harquebuses]] are aimed. It is on his head that are dumped the most [[chamber pot|aromatic containers]] of the so-called serious critics." Some of Ensor's contemporaneous work reveals his defiant response to this criticism. For example, the 1887 etching "Le Pisseur" depicts the artist urinating on a graffitied wall declaring (in the voice of an art critic) "Ensor est un fou" or "Ensor is a Madman."
-==Biography==+Ensor's paintings continued to be exhibited and he gradually won acceptance and acclaim. In 1895 his painting ''The Lamp Boy'' (1880) was acquired by the [[Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium]] in Brussels, and he had his first solo exhibition in Brussels. By 1920 he was the subject of major exhibitions; in 1929 he was named a [[Baron]] by [[Albert I of Belgium|King Albert]], and was the subject of the Belgian composer [[Flor Alpaerts]]'s ''James Ensor Suite''; and in 1933 he was awarded the band of the [[Légion d'honneur]]. [[Alfred H. Barr Jr.|Alfred H. Barr, Jr.]], the founding director of the [[Museum of Modern Art]] in New York, after considering Ensor's 1887 painting ''Tribulations of Saint Anthony'' (now in MoMA's collection), declared Ensor the boldest painter working at that time.
-Ensor's father, James Frederic Ensor, born in [[Brussels]] of [[English people|English]] parents, was a cultivated man who studied engineering in England and Germany. Ensor's mother, Maria Catherina Haegheman, was Belgian. Ensor himself lacked interest in academic study and left school at the age of fifteen to begin his artistic training with two local painters. From 1877 to 1880, he attended the [[Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts]] in [[Brussels]], where one of his fellow students was [[Fernand Khnopff]]. Ensor first exhibited his work in 1881. From 1880 until 1917, he had his studio in the attic of his parents' house. His only travels were three brief trips to [[Paris]], [[London]], and [[Holland]].+
-During the late 19th century much of his work was rejected as scandalous, particularly his painting ''[[Entry of Christ into Brussels]]'' (1888–89), but his paintings continued to be exhibited, and he gradually won acceptance and acclaim. In 1895 his painting ''The Lamp Boy'' (1880) was acquired by the [[Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium]] in Brussels, and he had his first solo exhibition in Brussels. By 1920 he was the subject of major exhibitions; in 1929 he was named a [[Baron]] by [[Albert I of Belgium|King Albert]], and was the subject of the Belgian composer [[Flor Alpaerts]]'s "James Ensor Suite"; and in 1933 he was awarded the band of the [[Légion d'honneur]]. Even in the first decade of the 20th century, however, his production of new works was diminishing, and he increasingly concentrated on music—although he had no musical training, he was a gifted improviser on the [[harmonium]], and spent much time performing for visitors.+Even in the first decade of the 20th century, however, Ensor's production of new works was diminishing, and he increasingly concentrated on music—although he had no musical training, he was a gifted improviser on the [[Pump organ|harmonium]], and spent much time performing for visitors.
-Against the advice of friends, he remained in Ostend during [[World War II]] despite the risk of bombardment. In his old age he was an honored figure among Belgians, and his daily walk made him a familiar sight in Ostend. He died there after a short illness, on 19 November 1949.+Against the advice of friends, he remained in [[Ostend]] during [[World War II]] despite the risk of bombardment. In his old age, he was an honored figure among Belgians, and his daily walk made him a familiar sight in Ostend. He died there following a short illness, on 19 November 1949 at the age of 89.
==Art== ==Art==
-While Ensor's early works, such as ''Russian Music'' (1881) and ''The Drunkards'' (1883), depict realistic scenes in a somber style, his palette subsequently brightened and he favored increasingly bizarre subject matter. Such paintings as ''[[The Scandalized Masks]]'' (1883) and ''[[Skeletons Fighting over a Hanged Man]]'' (1891) feature figures in [[grotesque mask]]s inspired by the ones sold in his mother's gift shop for Ostend's annual Carnival. Subjects such as [[carnivals]], [[masks]], [[puppetry]], skeletons, and fantastic [[allegories]] are dominant in Ensor's mature work. Ensor dressed skeletons up in his studio and arranged them in colorful, enigmatic tableaux on the canvas, and used masks as a theatrical aspect in his [[still lifes]]. Attracted by masks' plastic forms, bright colors, and potential for psychological impact, he created a format in which he could paint with complete freedom.+While Ensor's early works, such as ''Russian Music'' (1881) and ''The Drunkards'' (1883), depict realistic scenes in a somber style, his palette subsequently brightened and he favored increasingly bizarre subject matter. Such paintings as ''The Scandalized Masks'' (1883) and ''[[Skeletons Fighting over a Hanged Man]]'' (1891) feature figures in grotesque masks inspired by the ones sold in his mother's gift shop for Ostend's annual Carnival. Subjects such as [[carnivals]], [[masks]], [[puppetry]], skeletons, and fantastic [[allegories]] are dominant in Ensor's mature work. Ensor dressed skeletons up in his studio and arranged them in colorful, enigmatic tableaux on the canvas, and used masks as a theatrical aspect in his [[still lifes]]. Attracted by masks' plastic forms, bright colors, and potential for psychological impact, he created a format in which he could paint with complete freedom.
 + 
 +The four years between 1888 and 1892 mark a turning point in Ensor's work. He turned to religious themes, often the torments of Christ. Ensor interpreted religious themes as a personal disgust for the inhumanity of the world. In 1888 alone, he produced forty-five etchings as well as his most ambitious painting, the immense ''[[Christ's Entry Into Brussels in 1889]]''. Also known as ''Entry of Christ into Brussels'', it is considered "a forerunner of twentieth-century [[Expressionism]]." In this composition, which elaborates a theme treated by Ensor in his drawing ''Les Aureoles du Christ'' of 1885, a vast carnival mob in grotesque masks advances toward the viewer. Identifiable within the crowd are Belgian politicians, historical figures, and members of Ensor's family. Nearly lost amid the teeming throng is Christ on his donkey; although Ensor was an atheist, he identified with Christ as a victim of mockery. The piece was rejected by [[Les XX]] and was not publicly displayed until 1929. After its controversial export in the 1960s, the painting is now at the [[J. Paul Getty Museum]] in [[Los Angeles]].
 + 
 +As Ensor achieved belated recognition in the final years of the 19th century, his style softened and he painted less in the 20th century. Historians have generally seen Ensor's last forty or fifty years as a long period of decline, although noting a few original "superb and poignant" compositions from his later period. One author identified significant works of Ensor's late period such as ''The Artist's Mother in Death'' (1915), a subdued painting of his mother's deathbed with a still life of prominent medicine bottles in the foreground, and ''The Vile Vivisectors'' (1925), a vehement attack on those responsible for the use of animals in medical experimentation. Another stated "He would still paint pictures magnificently vigorous and bold, but they would be exceptions rather than the rule" noting works such as ''Our Two Portraits'' (1905), ''The Deliverance of Andromeda'' (1925), ''Port of Ostend'' (1933), and ''Ensor at the Harmonium'' (1933). The aggressive sarcasm that had characterized his work since the mid-1880s was less evident in his few new compositions, and much of his output consisted of mild repetitions of earlier works. Several still life paintings, void of social, political, or introspective content, stand out among his later works. Ensor turned more and more to music in his later years, playing the harmonium and even composing a ballet-pantomime in one act, ''The Scale of Love'' (1907), complete with an original libretto, sets, and costumes. He is known to have stated in later years that he had followed the wrong path in life, feeling that he should have devoted himself to music.
 + 
 + 
 +===Printmaking===
 +Ensor was a prolific and accomplished printmaker. He created 133 etchings and drypoints over the course of his career, with 86 of them made between 1886 and 1891 during the height of Ensor's most creative period. Ensor himself recognized that the prints were a key part of his artistic legacy, stating in a letter to Albert Croquez in 1934: "Yes, my intention is to go on working for a long time yet so that generations to come may hear me. My intention is to survive, and I think of the solid copper plate, the unalterable ink, easy reproduction, faithful prints, and I adopt etching as a means of expression."
-The four years between 1888 and 1892 mark a turning point in Ensor's work. Ensor turned to religious themes, often the torments of Christ. Ensor interpreted religious themes as a personal disgust for the inhumanity of the world. In 1888 alone, he produced forty-five etchings as well as his most ambitious painting, the immense ''[[Christ's Entry into Brussels in 1889]]''. In this composition, which elaborates a theme treated by Ensor in his drawing ''Les Aureoles du Christ'' of 1885, a vast carnival mob in grotesque masks advances toward the viewer. Identifiable within the crowd are Belgian politicians, historical figures, and members of Ensor's family. Nearly lost amid the teeming throng is Christ on his donkey; although Ensor was an atheist, he identified with Christ as a victim of mockery. The piece, which measures 99½ by 169½ inches, was rejected by [[Les XX]] and was not publicly displayed until 1929. After its controversial export in the 1960s, the painting is now at the [[J. Paul Getty Museum]] in [[Los Angeles, California]]. Also known as ''[[Christ's Entry into Brussels in 1889]]'', it is considered "a forerunner of twentieth-century [[Expressionism]]."+In 1889, Ensor created two highly political etchings. The first, titled ''Doctrinal Nourishment'' [or ''Alimentation Doctrinaire''], depicts key figures in Belgium—a bishop, the king, etc.—defecating on the masses of Belgium. The second, titled ''Belgium in the XIXth Century'' or ''King Dindon'', depicts [[Leopold II of Belgium|King Leopold II]] watching as military figures violently quell a protest. These prints are very rare today because Ensor attempted to remove them from circulation after being named Baron and many others were lost during the war.
-As Ensor achieved belated recognition in the final years of the 19th century, his style softened and he painted less. Critics have generally seen Ensor's last fifty years as a long period of decline. The aggressive sarcasm and scatology that had characterized his work since the mid-1880s was less evident in his few new compositions, and much of his output consisted of mild repetitions of earlier works. Significant works of Ensor's late period include ''The Artist's Mother in Death'' (1915), a subdued painting of his mother's deathbed with prominent medicine bottles in the foreground, and ''The Vile Vivisectors'' (1925), a vehement attack on those responsible for the use of animals in medical experimentation.+==Honour==
 +* 1919: Commander of the [[Order of Leopold (Belgium)|Order of Leopold]].
==Influence and legacy== ==Influence and legacy==
-James Ensor is considered to be an innovator in 19th century art. Although he stood apart from other artists of his time, he significantly influenced such 20th century artists as [[Paul Klee]], [[Emil Nolde]], [[George Grosz]], [[Alfred Kubin]], [[Wols]], [[Felix Nussbaum]], and other expressionist and [[surrealist]] painters of the 20th century.+Ensor is considered to be an innovator in 19th-century art. Although he stood apart from other artists of his time, he significantly influenced such 20th-century artists as [[Paul Klee]], [[Emil Nolde]], [[George Grosz]], [[Alfred Kubin]], [[Wols]], [[Felix Nussbaum]], and other expressionist and [[surrealist]] painters of the 20th century. As [[Los Angeles County Museum of Art]] CEO and Wallis Annenberg Director [[Michael Govan]] has explained: "James Ensor's signature style – his radical distortion of form, his ambiguous space, his riotous color, his muddled surfaces, and his proclivity for the bizarre – both anticipated and influenced modernist movements from [[Symbolism (arts)|symbolism]] and [[German Expressionism|German expressionism]] to [[dada]] and [[surrealism]]."
-The yearly philanthropic "Bal du Rat Mort" (Dead Rat Ball) in Ostend continues a tradition begun by Ensor and his friends in 1898.+Ensor's works are in many public collections, notably the [[Modern Art]] Museum of the [[Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium]] in Brussels, the [[Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp|Royal Museum of Fine Arts]] in [[Antwerp]], and the [[Museum of Fine Arts, Ostend|Museum voor Schone Kunsten]] in Ostend. Major works by Ensor are also in the [[Museum of Modern Art]] in [[New York City|New York]], the [[Musée d'Orsay]], Paris, the [[J. Paul Getty Museum]] in Los Angeles, and the [[Wallraf-Richartz Museum]] in [[Cologne]]. A collection of his letters is held in the Contemporary Art Archives of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts in Brussels. The Ensor collections of the Flemish fine art museums can all be seen at the James Ensor Online Museum.
-His works are in many public collections, notably the [[Modern Art]] Museum of the [[Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium]] in Brussels, the [[Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp|Royal Museum of Fine Arts]] in [[Antwerp]], and the [[Museum of Fine Arts, Ostend|Museum voor Schone Kunsten]] in Ostend. Major works by Ensor are also in the [[Museum of Modern Art]] in [[New York City|New York]], the [[Musée d'Orsay]], Paris, and the [[Wallraf-Richartz Museum]] in [[Cologne]]. A collection of his letters is held in the [http://www.fine-arts-museum.be/site/EN/frames/F_archcont.html Contemporary Art Archives] of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts in Brussels. The Ensor collections of the Flemish fine art museums can all be seen at the [http://www.jamesensor.eu James Ensor Online Museum].+Ensor has been paid homage by contemporary painters and artists in other media. The Belgian artist [[Pierre Alechinsky]] (b. 1927) and noted member of [[COBRA (art movement)|COBRA]], painted ''The Tomb of Ensor'' (1961) in homage to Ensor, which is now in the collection of the [[Museum of Fine Arts, Houston]]. He is the subject of a song, "Meet James Ensor", recorded in 1994 by the [[alternative rock]] duo [[They Might Be Giants]]. The 1996 Belgian movie, ''[[Camping Cosmos]]'', was inspired by drawings of James Ensor, in particular ''Carnaval sur la plage'' (1887), ''La mort poursuivant le troupeau des humains'' (1896), and ''Le bal fantastique'' (1889). The film's director, [[Jan Bucquoy]], is also the creator of a [[comics|comic]] ''[[Le Bal du rat mort|Le Bal du Rat mort]]'' inspired by Ensor.
-Ensor has been paid homage by contemporary painters and artists in other media: he is the subject of a song, "Meet James Ensor", recorded in 1994 by the [[alternative rock]] duo [[They Might Be Giants]]. The [[1996 in film|1996]] Belgian movie, ''[[Camping Cosmos]]'', was inspired by drawings of James Ensor, in particular ''Carnaval sur la plage'' (1887), ''La mort poursuivant le troupeau des humains'' (1896), and ''Le bal fantastique'' (1889). The film's director, [[Jan Bucquoy]], is also the creator of a [[comics|comic]] ''[[Le Bal du Rat mort]]'' inspired by Ensor.+An exhibition of approximately 120 works by James Ensor was shown at the [[Museum of Modern Art]] in New York City in 2009, and then at the [[Musée d'Orsay]], Paris, October 2009 – February 2010. The [[J. Paul Getty Museum|Getty]] mounted a similar exhibition June–September 2014. The Art Institute of Chicago exhibited Ensor's 1887 masterpiece The Temptation of St. Anthony from November 2014 through January 2015, along with other important paintings and etchings. From October 2016 through January 2017, the Royal Academy of Arts in London hosted a major exhibition of Ensor's paintings and etchings, curated by the Belgian artist [[Luc Tuymans]]. The black artist [[Kara Walker]] painted a controversial work, "Christ's Entry into Journalism", inspired by Ensor in 2017.
-An exhibition of approximately 120 works by James Ensor was shown at the [[Museum of Modern Art]] in New York City in 2009, and then at the [[Musée d'Orsay]], Paris, October 2009–February 2010.+The yearly philanthropic "[[Bal du Rat mort]]" (Dead Rat Ball) in Ostend continues a tradition begun by Ensor and his friends in 1898.
-A portrait of James Ensor can be seen hanging in the room of Laurie Strode from the 1978 movie [[Halloween (1978 film)|Halloween]].+In the movie Halloween (1978), a poster of one of Ensor's self-portraits appears on the wall of a room in Laurie Strode's (Jamie Lee Curtis) home.
-==Selected list of works== 
-*''[[The Dangerous Cooks]]'' 
-*''[[The Oyster Eater]]'' 
-*''[[Skeletons Fighting over a Pickled Herring]]'' (1891) [http://www.moma.org/explore/multimedia/audios/159/1745] 
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Current revision

"Aan de poort van het ekspressionisme in Vlaanderen moet men in reusachtige letters ‘James Ensor’ schrijven, gelijk men onvoorwaardelik ‘Cézanne’ schrijven moet vóór een absolute beweging als het frans kubisme."--"Ekspressionisme in Vlaanderen" (1918) by Paul van Ostaijen


"La parenté entre Manet et James Ensor n'est pas moins frappante. Dans le Lampiste, un gamin habillé de noir, qui arrange une grande lanterne, s'enlève sur une muraille gris perle. C'est une variante du fifre de Manet."--Die belgische Malerei im neunzehnten Jahrhundert (1904) by Richard Muther


"Ensor, too, illustrated works by Poe." --The Grotesque in Art and Literature (1957) by Wolfgang Kayser

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James Ensor (1860 – 1949) was a Belgian painter and printmaker known for such works as The Oyster Eater (1882), Christ's Entry Into Brussels in 1889 (1888–89) and The Bad Doctors (1892), The Dangerous Cooks (1896).

Contents

Biography

Ensor's father, James Frederic Ensor, born in Brussels to English parents, was a cultivated man who studied engineering in England and Germany. Ensor's mother, Maria Catherina Haegheman, was Belgian. Ensor himself lacked interest in academic study and left school at the age of fifteen to begin his artistic training with two local painters. From 1877 to 1880, he attended the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, where one of his fellow students was Fernand Khnopff. Ensor first exhibited his work in 1881. From 1880 until 1917, he had his studio in the attic of his parents' house. His travels were very few: three brief trips to France and two to the Netherlands in the 1880s, and a four-day trip to London in 1892.

During the late 19th century, much of Ensor's work was rejected as scandalous, particularly his painting Christ's Entry Into Brussels in 1889 (1888–89). The Belgian art critic Octave Maus famously summed up the response from contemporaneous art critics to Ensor's innovative (and often scathingly political) work: "Ensor is the leader of a clan. Ensor is the limelight. Ensor sums up and concentrates certain principles which are considered to be anarchistic. In short, Ensor is a dangerous person who has great changes. ... He is consequently marked for blows. It is at him that all the harquebuses are aimed. It is on his head that are dumped the most aromatic containers of the so-called serious critics." Some of Ensor's contemporaneous work reveals his defiant response to this criticism. For example, the 1887 etching "Le Pisseur" depicts the artist urinating on a graffitied wall declaring (in the voice of an art critic) "Ensor est un fou" or "Ensor is a Madman."

Ensor's paintings continued to be exhibited and he gradually won acceptance and acclaim. In 1895 his painting The Lamp Boy (1880) was acquired by the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium in Brussels, and he had his first solo exhibition in Brussels. By 1920 he was the subject of major exhibitions; in 1929 he was named a Baron by King Albert, and was the subject of the Belgian composer Flor Alpaerts's James Ensor Suite; and in 1933 he was awarded the band of the Légion d'honneur. Alfred H. Barr, Jr., the founding director of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, after considering Ensor's 1887 painting Tribulations of Saint Anthony (now in MoMA's collection), declared Ensor the boldest painter working at that time.

Even in the first decade of the 20th century, however, Ensor's production of new works was diminishing, and he increasingly concentrated on music—although he had no musical training, he was a gifted improviser on the harmonium, and spent much time performing for visitors.

Against the advice of friends, he remained in Ostend during World War II despite the risk of bombardment. In his old age, he was an honored figure among Belgians, and his daily walk made him a familiar sight in Ostend. He died there following a short illness, on 19 November 1949 at the age of 89.

Art

While Ensor's early works, such as Russian Music (1881) and The Drunkards (1883), depict realistic scenes in a somber style, his palette subsequently brightened and he favored increasingly bizarre subject matter. Such paintings as The Scandalized Masks (1883) and Skeletons Fighting over a Hanged Man (1891) feature figures in grotesque masks inspired by the ones sold in his mother's gift shop for Ostend's annual Carnival. Subjects such as carnivals, masks, puppetry, skeletons, and fantastic allegories are dominant in Ensor's mature work. Ensor dressed skeletons up in his studio and arranged them in colorful, enigmatic tableaux on the canvas, and used masks as a theatrical aspect in his still lifes. Attracted by masks' plastic forms, bright colors, and potential for psychological impact, he created a format in which he could paint with complete freedom.

The four years between 1888 and 1892 mark a turning point in Ensor's work. He turned to religious themes, often the torments of Christ. Ensor interpreted religious themes as a personal disgust for the inhumanity of the world. In 1888 alone, he produced forty-five etchings as well as his most ambitious painting, the immense Christ's Entry Into Brussels in 1889. Also known as Entry of Christ into Brussels, it is considered "a forerunner of twentieth-century Expressionism." In this composition, which elaborates a theme treated by Ensor in his drawing Les Aureoles du Christ of 1885, a vast carnival mob in grotesque masks advances toward the viewer. Identifiable within the crowd are Belgian politicians, historical figures, and members of Ensor's family. Nearly lost amid the teeming throng is Christ on his donkey; although Ensor was an atheist, he identified with Christ as a victim of mockery. The piece was rejected by Les XX and was not publicly displayed until 1929. After its controversial export in the 1960s, the painting is now at the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles.

As Ensor achieved belated recognition in the final years of the 19th century, his style softened and he painted less in the 20th century. Historians have generally seen Ensor's last forty or fifty years as a long period of decline, although noting a few original "superb and poignant" compositions from his later period. One author identified significant works of Ensor's late period such as The Artist's Mother in Death (1915), a subdued painting of his mother's deathbed with a still life of prominent medicine bottles in the foreground, and The Vile Vivisectors (1925), a vehement attack on those responsible for the use of animals in medical experimentation. Another stated "He would still paint pictures magnificently vigorous and bold, but they would be exceptions rather than the rule" noting works such as Our Two Portraits (1905), The Deliverance of Andromeda (1925), Port of Ostend (1933), and Ensor at the Harmonium (1933). The aggressive sarcasm that had characterized his work since the mid-1880s was less evident in his few new compositions, and much of his output consisted of mild repetitions of earlier works. Several still life paintings, void of social, political, or introspective content, stand out among his later works. Ensor turned more and more to music in his later years, playing the harmonium and even composing a ballet-pantomime in one act, The Scale of Love (1907), complete with an original libretto, sets, and costumes. He is known to have stated in later years that he had followed the wrong path in life, feeling that he should have devoted himself to music.


Printmaking

Ensor was a prolific and accomplished printmaker. He created 133 etchings and drypoints over the course of his career, with 86 of them made between 1886 and 1891 during the height of Ensor's most creative period. Ensor himself recognized that the prints were a key part of his artistic legacy, stating in a letter to Albert Croquez in 1934: "Yes, my intention is to go on working for a long time yet so that generations to come may hear me. My intention is to survive, and I think of the solid copper plate, the unalterable ink, easy reproduction, faithful prints, and I adopt etching as a means of expression."

In 1889, Ensor created two highly political etchings. The first, titled Doctrinal Nourishment [or Alimentation Doctrinaire], depicts key figures in Belgium—a bishop, the king, etc.—defecating on the masses of Belgium. The second, titled Belgium in the XIXth Century or King Dindon, depicts King Leopold II watching as military figures violently quell a protest. These prints are very rare today because Ensor attempted to remove them from circulation after being named Baron and many others were lost during the war.

Honour

Influence and legacy

Ensor is considered to be an innovator in 19th-century art. Although he stood apart from other artists of his time, he significantly influenced such 20th-century artists as Paul Klee, Emil Nolde, George Grosz, Alfred Kubin, Wols, Felix Nussbaum, and other expressionist and surrealist painters of the 20th century. As Los Angeles County Museum of Art CEO and Wallis Annenberg Director Michael Govan has explained: "James Ensor's signature style – his radical distortion of form, his ambiguous space, his riotous color, his muddled surfaces, and his proclivity for the bizarre – both anticipated and influenced modernist movements from symbolism and German expressionism to dada and surrealism."

Ensor's works are in many public collections, notably the Modern Art Museum of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium in Brussels, the Royal Museum of Fine Arts in Antwerp, and the Museum voor Schone Kunsten in Ostend. Major works by Ensor are also in the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Musée d'Orsay, Paris, the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, and the Wallraf-Richartz Museum in Cologne. A collection of his letters is held in the Contemporary Art Archives of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts in Brussels. The Ensor collections of the Flemish fine art museums can all be seen at the James Ensor Online Museum.

Ensor has been paid homage by contemporary painters and artists in other media. The Belgian artist Pierre Alechinsky (b. 1927) and noted member of COBRA, painted The Tomb of Ensor (1961) in homage to Ensor, which is now in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. He is the subject of a song, "Meet James Ensor", recorded in 1994 by the alternative rock duo They Might Be Giants. The 1996 Belgian movie, Camping Cosmos, was inspired by drawings of James Ensor, in particular Carnaval sur la plage (1887), La mort poursuivant le troupeau des humains (1896), and Le bal fantastique (1889). The film's director, Jan Bucquoy, is also the creator of a comic Le Bal du Rat mort inspired by Ensor.

An exhibition of approximately 120 works by James Ensor was shown at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City in 2009, and then at the Musée d'Orsay, Paris, October 2009 – February 2010. The Getty mounted a similar exhibition June–September 2014. The Art Institute of Chicago exhibited Ensor's 1887 masterpiece The Temptation of St. Anthony from November 2014 through January 2015, along with other important paintings and etchings. From October 2016 through January 2017, the Royal Academy of Arts in London hosted a major exhibition of Ensor's paintings and etchings, curated by the Belgian artist Luc Tuymans. The black artist Kara Walker painted a controversial work, "Christ's Entry into Journalism", inspired by Ensor in 2017.

The yearly philanthropic "Bal du Rat mort" (Dead Rat Ball) in Ostend continues a tradition begun by Ensor and his friends in 1898.

In the movie Halloween (1978), a poster of one of Ensor's self-portraits appears on the wall of a room in Laurie Strode's (Jamie Lee Curtis) home.




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "James Ensor" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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