Exhibitions
Renoir at the Theatre: Looking at La Loge
21 February – 25 May 2008
further information about the exhibition

Pierre Auguste Renoir La Loge , 1874, oil on canvas, The
Courtauld Gallery
Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s La Loge (The Theatre Box),
1874, is one of the masterpieces of Impressionism and a major highlight
of The Courtauld Gallery’s collection. Its depiction
of an elegant couple on display in a loge, or box at the theatre,
epitomises the Impressionists’ interest in the spectacle of
modern life. In celebration of The Courtauld Institute of Art’s
75th anniversary the exhibition Renoir at the Theatre:
Looking at ‘La Loge’, on
view from 21 February to 25 May 2008,
unites La Loge for the first time with Renoir’s other
treatments of the subject and logepaintings by contemporaries, including
Mary Cassatt and Edgar Degas. Concentrating on the early years
of Impressionism during the 1870s, the exhibition explores how these
artists used the loge to capture the excitement and changing nature
of fashionable Parisian society.
La Loge was Renoir’s principal exhibit
in the first Impressionist exhibition in Paris in 1874. The
complexity of its subject matter and its virtuoso technique
helped to establish the artist’s reputation as one of the
leaders of this radical new movement in French art. Renoir’s
brother Edmond and Nini Lopez, a model from Montmartre known
as ‘Fish-face’,
posed for this ambitious composition. At the heart of the
painting is the complex play of gazes enacted by these two
figures seated in a theatre box. The elegantly dressed woman
lowers her opera glasses, revealing herself to admirers in
the theatre, whilst her male companion trains his gaze elsewhere
in the audience. In
turning away from the performance, Renoir focused instead upon
the theatre as a social stage where status and relationships
were on public display.

‘Stop’ (Louis Morel-Retz) (1825-99) Aux Italiens (At
the Italian Theatre) Caricature from Le Petit Journal pour Rire, 1857
The Courtauld Gallery, London Theatre in Paris was a rapidly
expanding industry during the 19th century, dominating the cultural life of
the city. At
the time of La Loge it was estimated that over 200,000
theatre tickets were sold every week in Paris. Theatres
ranged from the popular variety act venues to the fashionable
elegance of the great opera houses. The burgeoning wealth
of the middle classes meant that the logesof the premier theatres
were no longer the preserve of high society. From the 1830s
onwards celebrated caricaturists such as Honoré Daumier
(1808-79) and Paul Gavarni (1804-66) seized upon the theatre
box as a rich theme for social satire. By the 1870s leering
men with over-sized opera glasses, middle-aged women struggling
to maintain their appeal, fathers parading their elegant daughters,
and gauche visitors from the provinces had emerged as stock
types in weekly magazines such as Le Petit Journal pour Rire. The
interest in the theatre, and particularly the loge as a space
for social display, was also harnessed by the booming fashion
industry which catered to the aspirational and newly wealthy
middle class. Lavishly produced journals such as La
Mode Illustrée included fine hand-coloured engravings
showing the latest fashions modelled by elegant ladies in theatre
boxes . A rich selection of this little-known graphic
material from contemporary Parisian journals will be on display
in the exhibition.

Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) At the Concert, 1880
Oil on canvas, 99 x 80 cm The Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, WilliamstownAs
the first artist to make the theatre box a subject for modern painting, Renoir
drew on this popular visual culture, which would also have shaped the context
in which his paintings were viewed. At
the time of the first Impressionist exhibition Renoir had been
particularly concerned with the loge and, in addition to the
Courtauld picture, produced two smaller canvases, both of which
will be displayed in the exhibition. Renoir returned to the theme
in two later canvases. At the Theatre, 1876-7, (National
Gallery, London) takes an oblique view of a theatre box, setting
a young woman and her companion off against the blurred mass
of the audience. At the Concert, 1880, (The
Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown) is one
of Renoir’s
most monumental treatments of the subject. This
work started as a portrait of the family of Monsieur Turquet,
the under-secretary of state for the fine arts, posed in their
opulent theatre box. Renoir subsequently altered the composition,
painting out his male patron who was originally shown in the
background, and transforming the image into a fashionable but
anonymous genre scene.
A major highlight of the exhibition is a small version of the Courtauld Gallery’s La Loge which was recently sold at auction in London and was one of the sensations of the sale, doubling its pre-auction estimate. Renoir seems to have painted it in 1874, perhaps in response to the critical success of the larger picture at exhibition, but this is the first time the two have been exhibited together.
Renoir at the Theatre will be the first exhibition to focus on this group of works. It will also display a number of important logepaintings by Renoir’s Impressionist contemporaries to explore alternative ways in which this subject was approached. Two major paintings by Mary Cassatt present contrasting views of women in their theatre boxes. Woman with a Pearl Necklace, 1879, (Philadelphia Museum of Art) shows a beautifully dressed woman in the sparkling interior of a theatre box as the passive recipient of admiring gazes . In the Loge, 1878, is a very different representation where a soberly attired woman assertively surveys the theatre through her opera glasses as an active participant in the play of gazes that surrounds her . In Degas’s treatments of the subject the artist explores different ‘snapshot’ viewpoints of the loge, as if capturing a fleeting glance. This is epitomised by his ambitious pastel La Loge, 1880 (private collection), in which the viewer is placed in the theatre stalls looking up at the head of a lone woman who emerges from the gilded surround of a loge, her pale face caught momentarily in a pool of light.
Renoir’s La Loge received enthusiastic reviews when it was first exhibited in Paris in 1874 and later that year it travelled to London for an exhibition organised by his dealer Durand-Ruel, making it one of the first major Impressionist paintings to be shown in this country. However, the painting did not sell at either exhibition and was bought inexpensively the following year by the minor dealer ‘Père’ Martin for 425 francs, providing Renoir with much needed funds to pay the rent. When Samuel Courtauld purchased it in 1925 the status of the painting had risen considerably along with the price which was now £22,600 and one of Courtauld’s most expensive acquisitions. Today La Loge is celebrated as one of the most important paintings of the Impressionist movement. This exhibition will cast new light upon Renoir’s masterpiece and the spectacle of the Parisian theatre which it captures.
