Lluïsa Vidal

{{Short description|Spanish painter}}

{{family name hatnote|Vidal|Puig|lang=Catalan}}

{{Infobox artist

| name = Lluïsa Vidal

| image = (Barcelona) Lluïsa Vidal - Autoretrat - Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya.jpg

| image_size =

| alt = self portrait of Lluïsa Vidal

| caption = Self-portrait from 1899

| birth_name =

| birth_date = {{birth date|1876|04|2|df=y}}

| birth_place = Barcelona

| death_date = {{death date and age|1918|10|22|1876|04|2|df=y}}

| death_place = Barcelona

| nationality = Spanish

| spouse =

| field = Painting

| training =

| movement = Catalan modernism

| works =

| patrons =

| awards =

| elected =

| website =

| bgcolour =

}}

Lluïsa Vidal i Puig (Barcelona, 2 April 1876 – 22 October 1918) was a painter.{{cite web|title=Lluïsa Vidal Puig|url=http://www.dbd.cat/index.php?option=com_biografies&view=biografia&id=718|work=Diccionari Biogràfic de Dones|accessdate=29 March 2013|archive-date=2 February 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140202130844/http://www.dbd.cat/index.php?option=com_biografies&view=biografia&id=718|url-status=dead}} Raised in a well-off family closely related to Catalan modernist circles, she is known as the only professional woman painter of Catalan modernism, and one of the few women of that period who went abroad to receive art lessons.

Biography

Born in the number 13 of Barcelona's Trafalgar street, Lluïsa Vidal was the second of 12 siblings (ten girls and two boys): one of her sisters became associated with Pablo Casals, and another one became the wife of the philologist and writer Manuel de Montoliu. Her father, Francesc Vidal i Jevellí, was a cabinetmaker, set designer, and a foundry worker interested in art and business. Lluïsa grew up in an encouraging environment for artistic creations. She received her first lessons from her father, and also from Joan González (Julio González's brother), Arcadi Mas i Fondevila and Simó Gómez. While in Paris, she attended Eugène Carrière's lessons, and she was especially influenced by artists such as Santiago Rusiñol (composition resources) and Ramon Casas (portraits).

When she was 16 she visited Madrid with her father and went for the first time to Museo del Prado, where she discovered Spanish masters such as Francisco de Goya or Diego Velázquez and realised the economic value of a good portraitist.{{cite book|last=Rudo|first=Marcy|title=Lluïsa Vidal, filla del modernisme|year=1996|publisher=La Campana|location=Barcelona|isbn=8488791305}}, p. 75

Her professional career started in 1898, when she was 22 and held her first exhibition at Quatre Gats in Barcelona. It was her first exhibition, and she became the first and only woman to hold an exhibition there, though some researchers doubt she even held an exhibition there in her early years,{{cite book|last=Panadès|first=Pruden|title=Lluïsa Vidal, pintora: una dona entre els mestres del modernisme|year=2001|publisher=La Caixa|location=Barcelona|isbn=8476647441}}, p. 107 as in the early stages of her career she was closely controlled by her father, who was more prone to less bohemian environments than that of Quatre Gats.

In April 1898 she exhibited three portraits at the 4th Exhibition of Fine Arts and Artistic Industries in Barcelona. This exhibition held over 2,000 works, some by Ramon Casas, Santiago Rusiñol, Joan Brull, Joaquim Mir, Ramon Pichot and Arcadi Mas i Fondevila. She received an honorific mention for one of her portraits, which depicted a priest named Collell. A brief review published in La Vanguardia mentioned Vidal as one of the best participants, stating that a portrait about a girl in Sitges was so simple and suggestive that could be envied by other male portrait painters. Another review, published in Diari de Barcelona stated that her portraits were so remarkable that those artworks were recommended as an outstanding example of her abilities. In November 1898 she held her first exhibition at Sala Parés, with the help of her father and Mas i Fondevila.

= In Paris =

File:Autoretrat de Lluïsa Vidal. Posant-se la jaqueta.png

Vidal left for Paris in 1901. She received her first lessons there from Henri-Léopold Lévy, a republican and academicist painter, but she soon enrolled at Académie Julian, whose women's section was commanded by Amélie Beaury-Saurel, Julian's wife and former student of the academy, also born in Barcelona. She soon abandoned the academy, disappointed, and after a short trip to England in 1902 she attended Georges Picard and Eugène Carrière's lessons at Georges Humbert's academy.

While in Paris she learned about the feminist movement and La Fronde, a newspaper published only by women since 1897. She also attended conferences and visited museums, and became more independent and self-confident about her art. She came back to Barcelona in 1902, as three of her sisters were ill, another one was abroad and the family was undergoing economic difficulties.

= Back to Barcelona =

Vidal went back to Barcelona with a lot of finished artworks and a feminist mentality. She met Carmen Karr, Dolors Monserdà and Francesca Bonnemaison, and started preparing several exhibitions. Pèl & Ploma magazine published several of her artworks, and she held an exhibition again at Sala Parés. On the other hand, while her family life was crumbling she reached the best stages of her artistic life, becoming the illustrator of Feminal magazine and holding several exhibitions in Madrid and Barcelona. She also started giving private painting lessons in 1908 so as to earn more money to sustain her family, and in 1911 she opened her own academy, placed in Isidre Nonell's ancient studio.

File:Autoretrat Lluïsa Vidal, Carbó sobre paper.jpg

Vidal became especially committed during Tragic Week, when she joined the Women's Popular Library and the Culture Institute, a project devised by Francesca Bonnemaison in 1909 so as to help single, working-class women to get an education. She also became a pacifist activist during World War I, when she joined the organisation of the Feminist Pacifist Committee.

In 1914 she held a renowned exhibition at Sala Parés, and Barcelona's press qualified her as a "distinguished woman" and "celebrated artist", which Carmen Karr (aka Joana Romeu in Feminal) found deeply annoying.{{cite journal|last=Romeu|first=Joana|title=L'exposició Lluïsa Vidal a la Sala Parés|journal=Feminal|date=1914|issue=87|page=10}}

Vidal died of the Spanish flu in 1918. She wrote her will on October 12 and left all her belongings to her single sisters. She did not state her profession, as that information was not needed in Spanish documents of that period.

Work

Vidal has been considered a Catalan modernism painter, based on the chosen themes, the colour tones and luminous transparencies used. With Joaquim Mir, Oriol Junyent, Joan González, Xavier Gosé, R. Canals and Ramon Pichot, Vidal has been considered as a member of the second Catalan modernism generation. Even some of her works had been attributed to Ramon Casas, as both artists show the influence of Diego Velázquez, John Singer Sargent, James McNeill Whistler or Édouard Manet.

= Portraits =

Frederic Vidal, 1895.jpg|Frederic Vidal, the artist's brother, 1895

Maria Luisa Güell i López, 1900.jpg|Maria Luisa Güell i López, 1900

(Barcelona) Retrat de Marta Vidal Puig - Lluïsa Vidal - Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya.jpg|Marta Vidal, the artist's sister

Marcel Montoliu i Vidal, nebot de Lluïsa Vidal.jpg|Marcel Montoliu, the artist's nephew

Carlota Vidal, 1903.jpg|Carlota Vidal, 1903

Sense títol, c. 1903-1905.jpg|Title unknown, c. 1903 – 1905

Ricard Canals, c. 1907-1918.jpg|Ricard Canals, c. 1907 – 1908

Francisca Vidal, 1909.jpg|Francisca Vidal, 1909

= Genre scenes =

File:Sense títol, c. 1890-1900.jpg|Unknown title, c. 1890 – 1900

File:Maternitat.jpg|Maternity, c. 1897

File:Sense títol,c. 1903, sanguina sobre paper.jpg|Title unknown, c. 1903

File:Les mestresses de casa, 1905.jpg|Housewives, 1905

File:Tornant de misa, c. 1909-1918.jpg|Back from mass, c. 1909 – 1918

File:Primera comunió, c. 1909-1918.jpg|First communion, c. 1909 – 1918

File:Pau Casals i Enric Granados, c. 1911-1914.jpg|Pablo Casals and Enric Granados, c. 1911.1914

File:Concert d'Enric Granados al Liceu, c. 1911-1912.jpg|Enric Granados's concert, c. 1911 – 1912

= Drawings =

File:Sanguina de Lluïsa Vidal. Nu.png|Nude, published in Feminal

File:Sanguina de Lluïsa Vidal de uns nens amb gatets.png|Young boys with kittens. Pèl & Ploma, 1903

File:Sanguina de Lluïsa Vidal. Nena dibuixant.png|Girl drawing. Pèl & Ploma, 1903

File:Sanguina de Lluïsa Vidal. Nens.png|Boys. Feminal, 1908

File:Sanguina de Lluïsa Vidal de la senyoreta Muntadas fem maig1909.png|Miss Muntadas. Feminal, 1909

File:Sanguina de Lluïsa Vidal de Dolors Monserdà.png|Dolors Monserdà, Feminal, 1914

File:Sanguina de Lluïsa Vidal d'Agnès Armengol.png|Agnès Armengol. Feminal, 1914

File:Sanguina de Lluïsa Vidal de Carme de Castellvi.png|Carme Castellví. Feminal, 1914

File:Sanguina de Lluïsa Vidal de Marguerida Xirgú.png|Margarida Xirgu. Feminal, 1914

References

{{reflist}}

Bibliography

  • {{cite book|last=Campmany|first=Maria Aurèlia|title=Sis pintores catalanes: Lola Anglada, Teresa Romero, Pepita Teixidor, Consol Tomàs, Visitació Ubach, Lluïsa Vidal: exposició antològica|year=1975|publisher=Acadèmia de Belles Arts de Sabadell|location=Sabadell|author2=Santos Torroella, Rafael|language=Catalan}}
  • {{cite book|last=Cirici Pellicer|first=Alexandre|title=El arte modernista catalán|year=1951|publisher=Aymà|location=Barcelona}}
  • {{cite book|last=Coll Mirabent|first=Isabel|title=Algunes notícies sobre Lluïsa Vidal i Puig, Pintora del segle XIX. Separata Miscel·lània Penedesaneca|year=1989|publisher=Institut d'Estudis Penedesencs}}
  • {{cite book|last=Fontbona|first=Francesc|title=Del Modernisme al Noucentisme. Història de l'art català|year=1985|publisher=Edicions 62|location=Barcelona|author2=Miralles, Francesc |language=Catalan}}
  • {{cite book|last=Oltra|first=Consol|title=Lluïsa Vidal. La mirada d'una dona, l'empremta d'una artista|year=1913|publisher=Salvatella|location=Barcelona}}