Pierre-Auguste Renior was born on February 25, 1841, in Limoges,
France. His father was a tailor and his mother was a dressmaker. In
1845 his family moved to Paris and settled near the Louvre Museum.
There young Renoir had his first experience with art.
From age 13 he became an apprentice painter in a porcelain factory,
where he painted for five years. At age 19 he took drawing lessons from
Charles Gleyre, and in 1862 he attended the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, a
classical school of fine arts in Paris. There he met
Claude Monet, Alfred
Sisley, and Frederic Bazille, the future founders of Impressionism.
During the 1860's Renoir was still painting in the academic tradition,
and his portrait of his mistress, Lise Trehot, was traditional enough
to be accepted at the 1867 Salon. In 1869 Renoir moved in with 'Claude
Monet' and Frederic Bazille. Under their influence he updated his
technique and color scheme. He started using little brush-strokes and
vibrant pure colors while painting mainly outdoors, 'en plein aire'.
In 1874 Renoir took part in the first exhibition of the 'Society of
independent artists' in the Paris studio of photographer Nadar. Monet's
painting 'Impression, soleil levant' (Impression, Sunrise 1872) was
untitled until the first show in 1874. A title was needed in a hurry
for the catalogue. Monet suggested "Impression" as a simple title for
his painting. The catalogue editor, Renoir's brother Edouard, added an
explanatory 'Sunrise', thus making "Impression: soleil levant" the
official title for Monet's work. From the painting's title, art critic
Louis Leroy coined the term "Impressionism", which he intended to be
derogatory. Monet's title came under criticism which seized upon the
first word. Renoir with
Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Alfred Sisley, were
joined by
Edgar Degas, and
Georges Seurat, and continued to exhibit together
despite the financial failure of the first show.
Impressionists slowly gained recognition after 1880, when public begun
to recognize the value of their works. In 1881 Renoir traveled to
Algeria, then to Spain, and later to Italy to see masterpieces of
Titian and Raphael in Florence and Rome. In 1882 Renoir met composer
Richard Wagner at his home in Sicily, and painted his portrait. In 1883 he had
his first one-man exhibition at the Paris gallery of Paul Durand-Ruel,
who became his art dealer. He received commissions to paint portraits
of prominent Parisians, and also made several group portraits of his
friends, models, writers, and fellow artists, such as the 'Luncheon of
the Boating Party' (1881). In 1887, being already famous, Renoir
donated several paintings to Queen Victoria on her Golden Jubilee. At
that time he worked on a big composition 'Les baigneuses' (The
Bathers), for which he made a series of nude female studies
representing feminine grace with masterful depiction of the soft forms
and tender texture of skin. His lively, joyful paintings brought him
fame and steady success.
In 1880 Renoir met Aline Chairgot. She became his model and a painting
assistant. In 1885, their first son, Pierre Renoir, was born. They
married in 1890, and spent much time in Essoyes, the childhood home of
his wife. In 1894, while living in Montmartre in Paris, they had their
second son, named
Jean Renoir, who later became a famous filmmaker. His
third son, Claude Renoir, was born in 1901. Family life was beneficial
to Renoir's work. He became as interested in painting people as he was
in painting landscapes. By the age of 50 Renoir became wealthy and
famous, but his health declined. During the 1890s he developed
rheumatoid arthritis and had to move to a warmer climate in the South
of France. In 1907 he bought a farm at Cagnes-sur-Mer. There Renoir
expanded the garden into a beautifully landscaped park and continued
painting landscapes and nudes.
Renoir suffered from complications of arthritis and was
wheelchair-bound during the last 20 years of his life. He also suffered
from cataracts, which affected his vision so that his later paintings
had a general reddish tone and softer lines. He continued to paint with
a brush on a stick strapped to his arm, because he lost mobility in his
fingers and in his right shoulder due to ankylosis. Renoir did not give
up art, he even started making sculptures with an assistant. He died at
his house in Cagnes on December 3, 1919, and was laid to rest at the
Cagnes-sur-Mer church cemetery.
In 1962 his son
Jean Renoir wrote 'Renoir My Father', the definitive
biography of August Renoir. The value of his art has been going up. In
1990, a smaller version of Renoir's painting 'Bal au moulin de la
Galette' (1876), was sold at an auction for $78,000,000.