one of Cézanne’s suppliers : Chabod

02 September 2021
Paul Cézanne, Portrait de l'artiste regardant par-dessus son épaule, 1883-1884, huile sur toile, 25 x 25 cm. Athènes, Basil & Elise Goulandris Foundation.
Alexis Lemaistre, dessinateur, Huyot, graveur, Le père Chabod, reproduit dans Lemaistre, Alexis, L’École des Beaux-Arts dessinée et racontée par un élève, Paris, Librairie Firmin-Didot et Cie, 1889, p. 49.
Alexis Lemaistre, dessinateur, Huyot, graveur, Le père Chabod, reproduit dans Lemaistre, Alexis, L’École des Beaux-Arts dessinée et racontée par un élève, Paris, Librairie Firmin-Didot et Cie, 1889, p. 49.
Lettre de Paul Cézanne en date de Fontainebleau le 14 juillet 1905. Archives Lefrance Bourgeois Paris

New information on one of Cézanne’s suppliers

Dear subscribers, dear visitors,
 
I wish you all an excellent return to work after a refreshing summer break.

As we pursue our task of constantly adding to the Guide, we nonetheless cannot resist the pleasure of sharing some recent discoveries concerning the firm of Chabod. The name of this merchant is well known to specialists and to those familiar with Cézanne, as the artist occasionally bought supplies from him and rated a number of his paints extremely highly.
The face and general appearance of this supplier, known as “Père Chabod”—just as there was a “Père Tanguy” (another of Cézanne’s dealers)—has long been known from a sketch by a student at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, Alexis Lemaistre. Lemaistre also left a delightful account of Père Chabod’s going round the School studios to furnish students with tubes of paint, canvases, etc. (qv. document below).

Recently we unearthed considerably more about Chabod’s background, marital status and life story.

Jean Michel Chabod (1829-1892) was an Italian immigrant from the Aosta Valley, like many Parisian colormen in the 19th and 20th centuries (we have already mentioned this in other articles and will return to it at greater length).

Born on October 4, 1819, in Courmayeur (Italy), he was the son of Jean Antoine Chabod and Catherine Belfrond. Though we do not know when he arrived in Paris, Chabod was already established in the capital at the age of twenty-eight, as indicated on the certificate of his first marriage. In January 1848, Chabod, then residing at 20, rue Montmartre and working as a color grinder, wedded Catherine Bailly, a seamstress specializing in waistcoats, then domiciled at the same address. By 1855, Chabod also owned a framing business, renting premises at 15, rue de Buci (current number 13). From 1855 to 1877 the lease for this third floor workshop on the courtyard remained in his name. Chabod was therefore the neighbor of the paint dealer Bovard, who had a store on the first floor of the same building at 15, rue de Buci. Moreover, when Bovard ceased trading in 1863, Chabod took over the business. The onetime grinder and framer thus became an artists’ colorman (marchand de couleurs fines), the profession he declared at the time of his second marriage in 1872.

After the death of Catherine Bailly, the widower married a young girl from Alsace (Offenheim, in the Bas-Rhin), also a waistcoat tailor like her predecessor. Marie Anne Blaes by name, his second wife was twenty-seven at the time, while Chabod was in his fifty-third year. For some time the store remained on rue du Buci, but then, in 1877, it moved to 20, rue Jacob, a little closer to the École des Beaux-Arts some 200 meters away. As attested by a number of written documents (see below), as well as by marks on the back of canvases used during prize competitions, students at the School would make frequent recourse to Chabod’s supplies.

Chabod ran the business until his death in September 1892. It was then continued by his widow Marie Anne Chabod, née Baes, under various trading names (Maison Chabod, Veuve Chabod, Veuve M. Chabod), before being taken over by Nicolas Abel Vignol in 1906 or shortly before. The canvas and paint business went bankrupt in 1913, but Vignol kept on the premises at 20, rue Jacob, employing it for a painting gallery until at least 1935.

For more details see the pages devoted to the house of Paul Cézanne and his suppliers, and to the Maison Bovard, Chabod, Vignol in the Labreuche Guide, https://www.guide-labreuche.com

Documents

1. An unpublished letter by Paul Cézanne

An unpublished letter by Paul Cézanne, a facsimile of which appears in the Lefranc Bourgeois Paris archives (reproduced opposite), demonstrates the artist’s loyalty to the firm of Chabod and his predilection for a number of its paints. Cézanne ordered five tubes of laque brûlée number 7 (bunt lake or madder brown?) from Chabod while staying in Fontainebleau in July 1905. Shortly before his death, Cézanne was still buying from the same firm, as shown by a letter to his son of September 1906 mentioning paints returned to Vignol (1).

Fontainebleau, July 14, 1905

Sir, —
 
I have received your various shipments
and would request you to
to send me:
 
5 Laque brulée 7 from Maison
                              Chabod
5 Veronese green 7 or 8
       from Bourgeois
and 5 cobalt from the same
       firm, same number
 
       Yours most faithfully,
 
            P. Cezanne
 
 
 
            (1) Elisabeth Reissner, “Ways of Making: Practice and Innovation in Cézanne’s Painting in the National Gallery,” National Gallery Technical Bulletin, vol. 29, 2008, p. 4–30.

2. Alexis Lemaistre’s account

"THE PAINT SUPPLIER. After the models, the only people allowed to enter the studios during sessions are paint suppliers and dealers in photographs, art documents, etc. — The latter are also to be found in architecture studios. Among paint dealers, first place goes to Père Chabod, their doyen and the students’ favorite. Not that he sells his tubes of cobalt or fine lake more cheaply than the others; but he is a bon vivant, he knows how to laugh at jokes, and he accepts with all the grace in the world the fanciful epithets with which his name is sometimes embellished; moreover, his paints are good; and then, — and herein lies the secret of his popularity, — he offers generous credit to any student at the School. He comes regularly every Monday, and then, once or twice a week, he comes to see if any of his friends, the painters, need anything. To save them any trouble, he makes sure of this in person, peering into the open paint-boxes on their stands. “I say! Haven’t you got any more peach-stone black?... And, you, no more red-brown?... Ah! if I hadn’t come you wouldn’t have had enough yellow ocher to finish your figure...” In short, Père Chabod is an incarnation of Providence. A strange incarnation, to be sure! Stocky, solidly built, with mischievous little eyes in a broad, open face framed by a thick grey beard, he is a joy to watch as he goes round with a large box of paints on his back and a pack of canvases under each arm, guffawing at the the students’ jokes and puns. Sometimes a competitor will come in to hawk his wares. “No need for paint, gentlemen?” But try as he might to lay out his tubes, nobody so much as looks at him; and, if anyone hears that Père Chabod’s in the workshop next door, everybody starts shouting: “Hey, Chabod!” The shouts last until Chabod, elated, triumphant, makes his entrance... Upon which, the competitor packs his bags and slinks off."

Alexis Lemaistre, L’École des Beaux-Arts dessinée et racontée par un élève, Paris: Librairie Firmin-Didot et Cie, 1889, pp. 43–44.

New findings concerning one of van Gogh’s suppliers in Paris: Hofer frères

23 December 2020
Vincent van Gogh, View from Theo’s Apartment, late March-mid April 1887, oil on canvas, 45,9 x 38,1 cm. Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation), s0057V1962, F341, JH1242.
Hofer frères, advertisement in Salon de 1888. Catalogue illustré. Peinture & Sculpture, Paris, Librairie d’art Ludovic Baschet, 1888, p. 365.
Hofer frères, advertisement in l’Amateur photographe, fifth year, new series, supplement to the issue on April 15, 1889.

Over recent decades, studies on van Gogh—on his technique and palette, on the supports of his paintings, on his creative processes, together with the drawing-up of a meticulous biographical chronology and editions of his correspondence—have culminated in an impressive corpus of knowledge. To the point that one wonders whether currently any other artist has been so thoroughly studied and documented. As far as the technical and material aspects of the work are concerned, the remarkable studies of Ella Hendriks, Muriel Geldof and Louis van Tilborgh have proved particularly valuable. These researchers have established a list of the painter’s suppliers in Paris based on marks and labels on supports, together with other sources. They include Dubus, Fermine, Hardy-Alan, Hennequin, Latouche, Hofer frères, Rey et Perrod, Pignel-Dupont, Tanguy, Tasset et Lhote.

Out of these ten stores seven were local for Vincent van Gogh (click here) during the short period from February 1886 to February 1888 when he lived at Theo’s on rue de Laval (now rue Victor-Massé), and then on rue Lepic.

Though the proximity of sources of supply should not be considered as the sole factor affecting the choice of supports and other materials, we can see that it was a decisive criterion in the case of our artist during his stay in Paris.

Apparently, Hofer frères, along with Dubus and Hardy-Alan, is one of three “intruders” among the group of Vincent’s “corner shops.” According to new evidence, however, things may not be quite so simple. 

Hofer frères (click here) were the last representative of Belot-Vallé-Bellavoine, a firm dating back to around 1768. Having squatted for more than a century against the apse of the church of Saint-Germain-l’Auxerrois, in 1871 the concern crossed the Seine to the rue des Grands-Augustins near the Pont-Neuf. The firm was typical of a number of traditional manufacturers near the Louvre, suppliers by appointment to the members of the Academy and students at the École des Beaux-Arts, and boasting a rather well-to-do clientele. The Impressionist years, however, saw the appearance of new businesses that tracked the shift in the center of gravity of certain artist colonies northwards to quarters such as the Nouvelle Athènes, Batignolles, Saint-Georges and Montmartre.

Hofer frères obviously attempted to adapt to these new consumption patterns and new market geography. Diversifying into the manufacture and sale of photographic equipment, and importing products from England, at the beginning of 1887 the company registered three trademarks for gelatino-bromide plates. It also moved its premises closer to the sphere of activity of this new artistic clientele. Thus it was that it opened a branch at 83, rue Blanche (place Blanche), opposite the end of rue Lepic, where Theo and Vincent van Gogh had moved at the beginning of June 1886, at number 54. This information can be gleaned from advertisements published between 1888 and 1890, as well as from its sole appearance in the Annuaire-Almanach du commerce, de l’industrie (...) (Didot-Bottin) of 1889.

One difficulty remains unresolved: no trace of the opening of the branch on place Blanche before the spring of 1888 has been unearthed, though Hofer frères marks appear on the backs of works dating from 1887 (F266a, F378, F380) and even 1886 (F273), and van Gogh left Paris in February 1888. It is possible that the supports he used came from rue des Grands-Augustins or that canvases made by Hofer frères were sold through various colormen in Paris. It is also possible that the opening of the store on the place Blanche predates 1888—to 1887 or 1886. 

We hope to discover documentary evidence of this as soon as the Paris City Archives, currently closed due to the pandemic, become accessible once more. 

We will be sure to keep you updated.

Lefranc Bourgeois: 300 years

30 November 2020
Eugène-Charles-Paul Vavasseur (1863-1949), projet de panneau publicitaire et de couverture de catalogue représentant une femme à la palette, vers 1900-1905, fusain et détrempe sur papier, morceaux de papier rapportés et collés pour le lettrage

2020, which unfortunately for all of us has been the year of the pandemic, is also that of a commemoration which finds its natural place in this Guide.
For 2020 also marks the three-hundredth anniversary of the founding of the famous Paris firm of Lefranc Bourgeois, whose earliest traces date back to 1720. To celebrate the event, a long-term exploration of the company’s archives was undertaken, an operation in which editorial staff at the Labreuche Guide have been closely involved. The year-long communication campaign culminated this summer in a special number of the magazine Pratique des Arts dedicated entirely to the company’s first 300 years. The issue features timelines, reproductions of the most interesting documents from the archives and views from artists, managers at the firm, and consultants and experts. Excerpts can be consulted here.

Learn about the history of the firm of Lefranc Bourgeois in the Guide, whose pages will continue to be enriched with references and images.

Archives Lefranc Bourgeois

30 November 2020
Lefranc - 1937 - publicité, Salon

Advertisement in a catalogue for the 1937 Salon exhibition.