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Johann Heinrich Füssli or Henry Fuseli

Paintings

The Meeting Of Sir Huon Of Bordeaux And Scherasmin In The Libanon Cave from Wieland's Oberon Print by Henry Fuseli

The Meeting Of Sir Huon Of Bordeaux And Scherasmin In The Libanon Cave from Wieland's Oberon

Tekemessa and Eurysakes Print by Henry Fuseli

Tekemessa and Eurysakes

Dido Print by Henry Fuseli

Dido

Christ Disappearing at Emmaus Print by Henry Fuseli

Christ Disappearing at Emmaus

The Night-Hag Visiting Lapland Witches Print by Henry Fuseli

The Night-Hag Visiting Lapland Witches

Leonore discovering the Dagger left by Alonzo Print by Henry Fuseli

Leonore discovering the Dagger left by Alonzo

Lysander with Helena and Hermia, from a Midsummer Night's Dream Print by Henry Fuseli

Lysander with Helena and Hermia, from a Midsummer Night's Dream

Oedipus Cursing His Son, Polynices Print by Henry Fuseli

Oedipus Cursing His Son, Polynices

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Aphrodite leads Paris to a duel with Menelaus

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Belinda's dream

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Brunhilde observes Gunther

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Cerasimus and Huon fleeing from Oberon

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Lady at dressing table

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Dante and Virgil on the Ice of Kozythus

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The awakening of the fairy queen Titania

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The Silence

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The Fire King

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The Refugee

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The Battle of Thor with the serpent of Midgard

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The artist in conversation with Johann Jacob Bodmer

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The artist in despair

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The nightmare leaves the warehouse

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The shipwreck of Odysseus

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Sleep and Death carry the body of Sarpedon

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The Dream Of The Shepherd

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Rütlischwur

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The Three Witches

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The loneliness at dawn

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Titania finds the magic ring on the beach

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Titania caressing the ass -headed Zettel

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Titania and Zettel

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The disrobing

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The Creation of Eve

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The Destiny Queen appears to Prince Arthur

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The sleepwalking Lady Macbeth

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The sin , followed by the death

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The Daughters of Pandareos

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The virtue recalls the youth

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The vision in the asylum

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The insane Kate

Johann Heinrich Füssli

A painter with glasses draws a fool

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Euphrosyne before the imagination and the Temperance

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Fairy Mab

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Falstaff in the laundry basket

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Hagen and the Undine of Danubius

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Half figure of a courtesan with plume

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Hamlet , Horatio and Marcellus and the Spirit

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Kriemhild sees the dead Siegfried in a dream

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Kriemhild's remorse

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Kriemhild throws herself on the dead Siegfried

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Kriemhild shows Gunther the Nibelungen Ring

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Kriemhild shows Hagen the head of Gunther

Johann Heinrich Füssli

La débutante

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Lady Macbeth takes the daggers

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Reclining Nude and Piano Teacher

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Nightmare

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Nightmare

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Odysseus before Scilla and Charybdis

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Parcival freed Belisane

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Portrait of Magdalena Hess of Zurich

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Portrait of Maria Hess

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Prince Arthur and the Fairy Queen

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Rider attacked by giant snake

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Romeo at Juliet's deathbed

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Satanic call to the Beelzebub in Hellfire

Johann Heinrich Füssli

The Ladies of Hastings

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Teiresias appears to Ulysseus

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Thetis mourns the dead Achilles

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Thetis asks Hephaestus

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Trompe -l'oeil

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Undine comes into the fisherman's cottage

Drawings

Johann Heinrich Füssli

Self-portrait

Henry Fuseli (German: Johann Heinrich Füssli; 7 February 1741 – 17 April 1825) was a Swiss painter, draughtsman and writer on art who spent much of his life in Britain. Many of his works, such as The Nightmare, deal with supernatural subject-matter. He painted works for John Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery, and created his own "Milton Gallery". He held the posts of Professor of Painting and Keeper at the Royal Academy. His style had a considerable influence on many younger British artists, including William Blake.

Oedipus Cursing His Son, Polynices Print by Henry Fuseli

Oedipus Cursing His Son, Polynices

Biography
Thor battering the Midgard Serpent, was Fuseli's diploma work for the Royal Academy, accepted 1790.

Fuseli was born in Zürich, Switzerland, the second of 18 children. His father was Johann Caspar Füssli, a painter of portraits and landscapes, and author of Lives of the Helvetic Painters. He intended Henry for the church, and sent him to the Caroline college of Zurich, where he received an excellent classical education. One of his schoolmates there was Johann Kaspar Lavater, with whom he became close friends.[1]

After taking orders in 1761 Fuseli was forced to leave the country as a result of having helped Lavater to expose an unjust magistrate, whose powerful family sought revenge. He travelled through Germany, and then, in 1765, visited England, where he supported himself for some time by miscellaneous writing. Eventually, he became acquainted with Sir Joshua Reynolds, to whom he showed his drawings. Following Reynolds' advice, he decided to devote himself entirely to art. In 1770 he made an art-pilgrimage to Italy, where he remained until 1778, changing his name from Füssli to the more Italian-sounding Fuseli.[1]

Early in 1779 he returned to Britain, taking in Zürich on his way. In London he found a commission awaiting him from Alderman Boydell, who was then setting up his Shakespeare Gallery. Fuseli painted a number of pieces for Boydell, and published an English edition of Lavater's work on physiognomy. He also gave William Cowper some valuable assistance in preparing a translation of Homer. In 1788 Fuseli married Sophia Rawlins (originally one of his models), and he soon after became an associate of the Royal Academy.[1] The early feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, whose portrait he had painted, planned a trip with him to Paris, and pursued him determinedly, but after Sophia's intervention the Fuselis' door was closed to her forever. Fuseli later said "I hate clever women. They are only troublesome".[2] In 1790 he became a full Academician, presenting Thor battering the Midgard Serpent as his diploma work.[3] In 1799 Fuseli was appointed professor of painting to the Academy. Four years later he was chosen as Keeper, and resigned his professorship, but resumed it in 1810, continuing to hold both offices until his death.[1] As Keeper, he was succeeded by Henry Thomson.

In 1799 Fuseli exhibited a series of paintings from subjects furnished by the works of John Milton, with a view to forming a Milton gallery comparable to Boydell's Shakespeare gallery. There were 47 Milton paintings, many of them very large, completed at intervals over nine years. The exhibition proved a commercial failure and closed in 1800. In 1805 he brought out an edition of Pilkington's Lives of the Painters, which did little for his reputation.[1]

Antonio Canova, when on his visit to England, was much taken with Fuseli's works, and on returning to Rome in 1817 caused him to be elected a member of the first class in the Academy of St Luke.[1]


Works

As a painter, Fuseli favoured the supernatural. He pitched everything on an ideal scale, believing a certain amount of exaggeration necessary in the higher branches of historical painting. In this theory he was confirmed by the study of Michelangelo's works and the marble statues of the Monte Cavallo,[1][4] which, when at Rome, he liked to contemplate in the evening, relieved against a murky sky or illuminated by lightning.[1]

Describing his style, the 1911 edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica said that:

His figures are full of life and earnestness, and seem to have an object in view which they follow with intensity. Like Rubens he excelled in the art of setting his figures in motion. Though the lofty and terrible was his proper sphere, Fuseli had a fine perception of the ludicrous. The grotesque humour of his fairy scenes, especially those taken from A Midsummer-Night's Dream, is in its way not less remarkable than the poetic power of his more ambitious works.[1]

Though not noted as a colourist,[1] Fuseli was described as a master of light and shadow.[5] Rather than setting out his palette methodically in the manner of most painters, he merely distributed the colours across it randomly. He often used his pigments in the form of a dry powder, which he hastily combined on the end of his brush with oil, or turpentine, or gold size, regardless of the quantity, and depending on accident for the general effect. This recklessness may perhaps be explained by the fact that he did not paint in oil until the age of 25.[1]


The Nightmare, (1781), Detroit Institute of Arts

Fuseli painted more than 200 pictures, but he exhibited only a small number of them. His earliest painting represented "Joseph interpreting the Dreams of the Baker and Butler"; the first to excite particular attention was The Nightmare, exhibited in 1782.[1] He painted two versions, shown in the Nightmare article. Themes seen in The Nightmare were repeated in his 1796 painting, Night-Hag visiting the Lapland Witches.

His sketches or designs numbered about 800; they have admirable qualities of invention and design, and are frequently superior to his paintings.[1] In his drawings, as in his paintings, his method included deliberately exaggerating the proportions of the human body and throwing his figures into contorted attitudes. One technique involved setting down arbitrary points on a sheet, which then became the extreme points of the various limbs.[1] Notable examples of these drawings were made in concert with George Richmond when the two artists were together in Rome. He rarely drew the figure from life, basing his art on study of the antique and Michelangelo. He produced no landscapes—"Damn Nature! she always puts me out," was his characteristic exclamation—and painted only two portraits.[1]

Many interesting anecdotes of Fuseli, and his relations to contemporary artists, are given in his Life by John Knowles (1831).[1] He influenced the art of Fortunato Duranti.


Writings
Henry Fuseli (aged 63) by Edward Hodges Baily, 1824, National Gallery, London

In 1788 Fuseli started to write essays and reviews for the Analytical Review. With Thomas Paine, William Godwin, Joseph Priestley, Erasmus Darwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, and others interested in art, literature and politics, Fuseli frequented the home of Joseph Johnson, a publisher and prominent figure in radical British political and intellectual life. He also visited Allerton Hall in Liverpool, the home of William Roscoe.

When Louis XVI was executed in France in 1793, he condemned the revolution as despotic and anarchic, although he had first welcomed it as a sign of "an age pregnant with the most gigantic efforts of character."

He was a thorough master of French, Italian, English and German, and could write in all these languages with equal facility and vigour, although he preferred German as the vehicle of his thoughts. His principal work was his series of twelve lectures delivered to the Royal Academy, begun in 1801.[1]
Influence

His pupils included John Constable, Benjamin Haydon, William Etty, and Edwin Landseer. William Blake, who was 16 years his junior, recognized a debt to him, and for a time many English artists copied his mannerisms.


Death

After a life of uninterrupted good health[1] he died at the house of the Countess of Guildford on Putney Hill,[6] at the age of 84, and was buried in the crypt of St Paul's Cathedral. He was comparatively wealthy at the time of his death.[1]

See also

Füssli, Johann Caspar (1706–1782), Swiss portrait painter (father of Henry Fuseli)
Füssli, Johann Kaspar (1743–1786), Swiss entomologist (brother of Henry Fuseli)

References and sources

References

Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1911
Myrone, Martin (2001) Henry Fuseli. London: Tate Gallery Publishing, p. 53. ISBN 1854373579
Thor battering the Midgard Serpent, 1790. Royal Academy of Arts Collections, 5 February 2014. Retrieved 5 February 2014. Archived here.
Papal Palace on Monte Cavallo, Rome. Retrieved 2011-12-28.
Leslie, C. R. (1855). Tom Taylor, ed. Autobiographical Recollections (Letter to Miss Leslie December 1816). Boston: Ticknor & Fields.

"Putney | Old and New London: Volume 6 (pp. 489–503)". British-history.ac.uk. 2003-06-22. Retrieved 2012-05-14.

Sources

Johann Heinrich Füssli in the SIKART dictionary and database
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: William Michael Rossetti (1911). "Fuseli, Henry". In Chisholm, Hugh. Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

Further reading

Calè, Luisa. Fuseli's Milton Gallery: 'Turning readers into spectators'. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2006.
Keay, Carolyn. Henry Fuseli. London: Academy Editions, 1974.
Lentzsch, Franziska, et al. Fuseli: The Wild Swiss. Zürich: Scheidegger & Spiess, 2005.
Myrone, Martin. Gothic Nightmares: Fuseli, Blake and the Romantic Imagination. London: Tate Publishing, 2006.
Powell, Nicolas. Fuseli: The Nightmare. London: Allen Lane, 1973.
Pressly, Nancy L. The Fuseli Circle in Rome: Early Romantic Art of the 1770s. New Haven: Yale Center for British Art, 1979.
Tomory, P. A. The Life and Art of Henry Fuseli. New York: Praeger, 1972.
Weinglass, David H. Henry Fuseli and the Engraver's Art. Boston: World Wide Books, 1982.

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