Symbolist painter Gustave Moreau, known for his…
1898 CE
A small Paris museum is created for his pictures, and Georges Rouault, Moreau's favorite pupil at the École des Beaux-Arts, becomes the curator.
Rouault's early style had been academic, but around this time the twenty-seven-year-old artist undergoes a psychological crisis, and his work begins to evolve in a direction influenced by that of Paul Cézanne, Paul Gauguin, and the late Vincent van Gogh.
Rouault's artistic evolution is accompanied by a religious one, for in about 1895 he had become an ardent Roman Catholic.
He forms friendships with the Catholic intellectuals Joris-Karl Huysmans and Léon Bloy.
Through another friend, a deputy public prosecutor, he begins to frequent, as had Daumier, the Paris law courts, where he has a close view of humanity apparently fallen from the grace of God.
His favorite subjects become prostitutes, tragic clowns, and pitiless judges.