Jacques-Elie-Abraham Hermanjat (29 September 1862, Geneva - 12 October 1932, Aubonne) was a Swiss painter who worked primarily in the Fauvist and Divisionist styles and was one of the first Swiss artists to draw on the work of Paul Cézanne.[1] He was also involved in cultural politics.

Self-portrait (1921)

Biography edit

After attending the public schools of Geneva, he studied art with Barthélemy Menn and Auguste Baud-Bovy. In 1886, he went to Algiers, to join his mother and brother after his father's death. He stayed until 1888 and returned on two other occasions; 1889-1890 and 1893-1896.[2] During these visits, he developed an interest in Orientalism, a genre which was already in favor with some of his compatriots, including Charles Gleyre and Auguste Veillon.[3] His paintings there were executed in the traditional styles he had learned in Geneva.

In 1896 Hermanjat, then married, returned with his wife Marie Louise, née Zénobel (1855–1955), to Switzerland and initially settled in Lausanne. In 1908, they moved to Aubonne. By 1911, he had built a cottage there, where he lived until his death. He soon abandoned Orientalism and turned to landscapes, spending much of his time in the mountains; primarily near Aigle, although he also visited Valais, Nendaz, Haute-Nendaz and Verbier. His paintings from this period owe much to the influence of Giovanni Segantini.

 
The grave of Hermanjat, his wife and their adoptive daughter at the cemetery of Aubonne

During the years 1908 to 1912, he became attracted to Fauvism and began applying non-natural colors to his landscapes.[4] In 1910, following genealogical research, he began spelling his name "Hermanjat", rather than "Hermenjat" as he had previously. It was also at this time that he made the acquaintance of Ferdinand Hodler and was influenced by Symbolism.[5] Over the next decade, however, Cézanne would supplant Hodler as his primary inspiration.

From 1910 to 1928, he was a member of the Central Committee of the Society of Swiss Painters, Sculptors and Architects (SPSAS).[6] He also served on the Federal Commission for Fine Arts from 1922 to 1925.[7] This was in addition to several teaching positions and jury service for art competitions.

His adopted daughter, Germaine Hermanjat (1909-2002), started out to be a painter but devoted herself to the promotion of his works. In 2003, following her death, money she had bequeathed to the city of Nyon was used to create the Abraham Hermanjat Foundation. In 2012, the Musée historique et des porcelaines de Nyon [fr], the Musée du Léman and the foundation joined, on the occasion of his 150th anniversary, to present the first major showing of his works in over thirty years.

Selected paintings edit

References edit

  1. ^ His tableau of 1904, Les Rochers de Naye en mars (Schaffhouse, Museum zu Allerheiligen) is obviously modeled on Cézanne's tableau of Montagne Sainte-Victoire. See: Abraham Hermanjat 2012, p=103-109.
  2. ^ Séjours maghrébins d’Hermanjat : octobre 1886-1888, octobre 1889-1890, 1893-1896.
  3. ^ On Swiss Orientalism, see: Von ferne lässt grüssen. Schweizer Orientmalerei des 19. Jahrhunderts, cat. exp., Soleure, Kunstmuseum Solothurn. Heidelberg, Kehrer Verlag, 2001
  4. ^ On Hermanjat and Fauvism, see Abraham Hermanjat 2012, pp. 111–125.
  5. ^ On the links between Hodler and Hermanjat, see : Laurent Langer : « Dans le sillage de Hodler : Abraham Hermanjat », Les lettres & les arts. Cahiers de critique littéraire et artistique, hors série No. 1 consacré à Ferdinand Hodler, 2013, p. 62-65.
  6. ^ See various articles in the SPSAS review, L’art suisse. Organe pour la protection et le développement des intérêts des artistes suisses.
  7. ^ See: Prix conseillé. 100 ans de Concours fédéral des beaux-arts, 1899-1999, Pierre-André Lienhard, Stéphanie Bédat et Katrin Künzi dir., publ. par L'Office fédéral de la culture, [Zurich], Orell Füssli Verlag, [1999].

Sources edit

  • Langer, Laurent; Bron-Pache, Rosemonde; Rossellat, Daniel; Givel, Jean-Claude; Jaunin, Françoise; Peltre, Christine; Lieber, Vincent; Beltinger, Karoline; Wittwer, Hans-Peter; Beltinger, Carinne; Jean-Petit-Matile, Maurice (2012). Abraham Hermanjat 1862-1932: De l'Orient au Léman (cat. exp., Nyon, Musée historique et des porcelaines, château de Nyon et Musée du Léman. Nyon, Fondation Abraham Hermanjat). Berne: Benteli. ISBN 978-3716517215.

Further reading edit

  • André Kuenzi, Collection Hermanjat, Nyon, Maison du Léman, s.d. [1976].
  • Abraham Hermanjat. Le lac, text by Georges Peillex and Germaine Hermanjat, Lausanne, Jean Genoud Imprimeur, 1982.
  • Hermanjat, text by Charles Chinet, Franck Jotterand and André Kuenzi, Aubonne, Éditions « Le Crêt », 1962.
  • "Le peintre Abraham Hermanjat 1862-1932", special edition of L’art en Suisse, January–March 1933.
  • Paul Budry, Abraham Hermanjat. Tableaux choisis précédés d’un essai sur le peintre et son œuvre, Lausanne, Éditions Romanes, 1932.

External links edit