Alfred Philippe Roll Painting Reproductions 1 of 1
1846-1919
French Realist Painter
Alfred Philippe Roll, a painter whose career straddled the shifting sands of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, occupies a somewhat curious space in French art. Born in 1846, he studied at the prestigious École des Beaux-Arts, under the tutelage of figures like Jean-Léon Gérôme and Léon Bonnat, absorbing their academic rigor. His early works, romantic in style, nodded toward the traditions of Bolognese and Courbet, as seen in pieces like "Environs of Baccarat" and "Evening," exhibited in 1870. But it wasn’t long before Roll made a decisive pivot towards realism - a shift that would come to define his place in the annals of art history.
It was "The Flood at Toulouse" in 1875 that first thrust Roll into the public eye. This dramatic depiction of human suffering captured the attention of critics and viewers alike. It was a painting that felt grounded in the very real anxieties of its time, and for Roll, it marked the beginning of a commitment to documenting the lives of ordinary people. By the time he exhibited "Fête of Silenus" at the Ghent Museum in 1877, Roll had fully embraced the realist impulse, moving away from the romantic and into the realm of the everyday.
His breakthrough came in 1880 with "Miner's Strike," a work that solidified his reputation as one of France’s leading painters. It wasn’t just the political charge of the subject matter that resonated - though Roll clearly sympathized with the plight of workers - it was the sheer humanity of the piece. The figures in his canvases are not allegorical; they are real, struggling people, and Roll’s brush lends them dignity. This attention to the working class set him apart from many of his contemporaries and cemented his role as a painter of the people.
Roll’s career didn’t stop at socially conscious canvases. He became the official painter for the French government, his realism evolving into grander, more public works. His murals for the Hôtel de Ville and his large-scale commissions like "President Carnot at Versailles" and "The Tzar and President Faure Laying the Foundation Stone of the Alexandre III Bridge" were celebrated in their day and secured his place in public memory. As president of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, which he co-founded, Roll also helped shape the trajectory of French art in the early 20th century. But perhaps his greatest achievement was the way he remained connected to the everyday, even as his commissions became ever grander. His work, whether of presidents or miners, always retained a deep respect for the human experience.
It was "The Flood at Toulouse" in 1875 that first thrust Roll into the public eye. This dramatic depiction of human suffering captured the attention of critics and viewers alike. It was a painting that felt grounded in the very real anxieties of its time, and for Roll, it marked the beginning of a commitment to documenting the lives of ordinary people. By the time he exhibited "Fête of Silenus" at the Ghent Museum in 1877, Roll had fully embraced the realist impulse, moving away from the romantic and into the realm of the everyday.
His breakthrough came in 1880 with "Miner's Strike," a work that solidified his reputation as one of France’s leading painters. It wasn’t just the political charge of the subject matter that resonated - though Roll clearly sympathized with the plight of workers - it was the sheer humanity of the piece. The figures in his canvases are not allegorical; they are real, struggling people, and Roll’s brush lends them dignity. This attention to the working class set him apart from many of his contemporaries and cemented his role as a painter of the people.
Roll’s career didn’t stop at socially conscious canvases. He became the official painter for the French government, his realism evolving into grander, more public works. His murals for the Hôtel de Ville and his large-scale commissions like "President Carnot at Versailles" and "The Tzar and President Faure Laying the Foundation Stone of the Alexandre III Bridge" were celebrated in their day and secured his place in public memory. As president of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, which he co-founded, Roll also helped shape the trajectory of French art in the early 20th century. But perhaps his greatest achievement was the way he remained connected to the everyday, even as his commissions became ever grander. His work, whether of presidents or miners, always retained a deep respect for the human experience.
1 Alfred Roll Paintings
Manda Lametrie, Farm Girl 1887
Oil Painting
$1088
$1088
Canvas Print
$53.54
$53.54
SKU: RLL-16658
Alfred Philippe Roll
Original Size: 214.5 x 161 cm
Musee d'Orsay, Paris, France
Alfred Philippe Roll
Original Size: 214.5 x 161 cm
Musee d'Orsay, Paris, France