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Holyday
Image source: tate.org.uk

Holyday

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Support Type: Canvas
Paint Type: Oil Paint
Current Location: Tate Britain

In 1836, the son of a textile merchant and a hat designer was no stranger to fashion and did not need to make an extravagant living. James Tissot, at the age of 17, decided to be an artist formally and study for the same in Paris. He was especially known for his works of bourgeois society, with Impressionist, realist and academic elements in his art. He focused on the fashion in the Belle Époque, and later in his life earned a reputation for seriousness and complexity in the 19th century. Before this change? Tissot’s work was scandalous and reflected the high French society with a tension and awkwardness that remains relevant today. During the 1870’s, he spent a surprising amount of time in lakes, parks, and lawns to create enigmatic scenes of leisure that could only be afforded by money. In the “Holyday”, this painting, the man and woman seem to be exchanging milk, but they don’t seem to be a couple, yet are exchanging milk and lounging around each other with surprising ease and familiarity. Their chaperones do not bat an eye, almost uninterested in the subjects. While such an innocent scene might have created a scandal today, but back then. It would have been an outrage. Autumn sets in, and it starts to cool. And what better time to have a picnic? In recent years, this painting has been called “the picnic”. The location in St John Wood, an area with a reputation for sneaking out of society and doing whatever is wanted. The men are from an elite cricket club, called “I Zingari amateur cricket club”. Some saw this scandalous piece as vulgar, but that was Tissot’s style: to show society as it is, with its imperfections and beauty. Later, after the death of his partner, Kathleen Newton, he shifted his work to spirituality, and his work reflected many biblical paintings.

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Information Compiled by Rhydhm Chheda
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