Reproductions Munier, Emile

Emile Munier

1840 - 1895

France, Academic Classicism

Emile Munier Biography

Emile Munier was born in Paris on June 2, 1840 and lived with his family at 66 rue des Fossés, St Marcel. Munier's father, Pierre François Munier, was an artist upholsterer at the Manufacture Nationale des Gobelins and his mother, Marie Louise Carpentier, was a polisher in a cashmere cloth mill.
 
Emile Munier and his older brother François received their early schooling at the communal school.  By the time his younger brother, Florimond, was born, the family’s situation had improved and Florimond was allowed to enroll in a boarding school.   All three brothers Munier were gifted in the art of drawing and each had produced a pastel self-portrait between the ages of 13 and 14 – Emile’s is dated 1854.
 
All three Munier children entered the Gobelins, however François was the only one who stayed and he, like his father, eventually rose to the postion of head-foreman.  Emile Munier attended classes in drawing, painting, anatomy, perspective and chemistry, in relation to wool dyeing in order to become an artist upholsterer.  The artist, Abel Lucas, supervised the drawing courses; Mr. Chabale taught the flowers and ornaments classes; chemistry was taught by Mr. Chevreuil and Mr. Decaux was the engineer of Arts et Manufactures.
 
Emile Munier developed a close relationship with his professor (Abel Lucas) and his family.  On August 10, 1861, Emile Munier married Henriette Lucas, Abels’ daughter, in the chapel of the Gobelins.  Munier, then an artist upholsterer at the Manufacture Nationale des Gobelins, continued to draw and paint beside his father-in-law. Munier studied painting, in the Academic tradition, principally by interpreting works of Boucher.
 
During the 1860s, Emile Munier received three medals at the Beaux-Arts and in 1869 he exhibited at the Salon. Munier became a great supporter of the Academic ideals and a follower of Bouguereau; whose subject matter would be a great inspiration to the young Munier.
 
In 1867, Henriette gave birth to a son, Emile Henri. Six weeks after the birth, having contracted severe rheumatism, Henriette died prematurely.  In 1871, Munier abandoned his career as an upholsterer and devoted his time solely to painting; Munier also began teaching classes to adults three nights a week.
 
Sargine Augrand, a student of Abel Lucas and a close friend of Emile & Henriette (before she died), caught Emile’s eye.  Sargine was teaching drawing and had acquired a certain reputation as a pastel portraitist - exhibiting at the Salon from 1863 to 1870. The young couple decided to marry and the wedding took place in Paris on January 4, 1872. The couple lived at 8 rue des Beaux-Arts, in a small apartment and studio, where Corot and Fantin-Latour also had studios.
 
Emile Munier frequented the studio of William Bouguereau, to whom he was well liked and appreciated. The master had even nicknamed him la sagesse (wisdom) or le sage Munier (Munier the wise).  In 1873, Emile  painted Le Voleur de Pommes and La Leçon de Tricot.  In 1874 Sargine Munier gave birth to a daughter: Marie Louise.
 
Beginning in 1876, the Muniers spent their summer vacations on the Normandy sea-cost. There, Emile produced numerous drawings as well as some watercolor paintings depicting scenes of boats and fishermen.  Before joining his family for their summer vacation in 1879, he traveled to the Ardennes to paint a commissioned portrait painting of Madame de Chanzy
 
In 1883, the Muniers visited le lac du Bourget (Bourget lake) where Emile certainly painted La jeune fille au lac and La petite fille aux oranges.  During their stay in Aix, Emile frequently attended Italian opera and after returning to Paris, he continued his accentuated interest for music and singing.
 
Emile, whom had already painted a Virgin Mary crowned with a halo in 1883, produced an infant Jesus which became the object of a very popular religious image that remained a classic of 1st communion images up to the middle of the 20th century.
 
Munier developed an exceptional talent for depicting the short-lived expressions and movements of his subjects.  Munier also became interested in scenes of children in country situations and beginning in 1886 he would return to Auvergne on a regular basis, producing numerous sketches of young peasants among farm animals.
 
In 1886, Munier went back to the subject of cherubs, which he had already worked with three years earlier in Les deux cupidons (1883).  Munier's painting L’amour désarmé (Love Disarmed) presented to the Salon in 1886 again displays Bouguereau’s influence on Munier and a number of  American collectors had actually attributed this painting to  Bouguereau.
 
Among his many American patrons were, Mr. & Mrs. Chapman H. Hyams. They were important collectors of contemporary French paintings during the 19th century and favored artists like Henner, Bouguereau, Gerôme, Vinel and Schreye. Munier painted their portrait in 1889, and it, along with much of their collection, is now in the New Orleans Museum of Art.
 
At the Salon of 1890, Emile Munier exhibited Rêve d’enfant: a little girl in her bed, surrounded by two allegoric angels. The artist in several paintings has recapture the girl’s face, with her eyes full of emotion. Throughout the year of 1892, Emile Munier painted mythological and religious paintings: several cupids, a goddess with an arm raised, a virgin Mary praying as well as the famous Mother and child .  Munier continued teaching painting in Paris and attending l’Atelier de peinture de l’Ecole Polytechnique from 1892 to 1893.
 
During the year 1894, Emile Munier produced a number of paintings in his well-affirmed style, including one of two cupids entitled Un sauvetage. Munier also painted a very unusual work Premier prix, in which a dog stands among flowers at a dog show and during his stay at Mont Dore, he produced a number of watercolor paintings that explored the surrounding landscapes and gardens in Auvergne.
 
Emile Munier died on Saturday June 29, 1895 at 9 am and was buried at the Montparnasse cemetery.