The Bird Cage, a colorful scene of
a woman placing a bird cage on a sunlit balcony, is absolutely
characteristic of the colorful scenes for which Frederick Frieseke
is best known. Painted in Giverny, France, the artist colony in
which Frieseke spent more than fifteen summers, the painting is
a brilliant exercise in color and pattern. What has drawn the painter's
eye in this scene is the boldness of the colorthe deep blue
of the model's dress against the powerful yellow-orange of the
foliage. Within this dazzle of color and the anomalous planes of
fabric and foliage, the strength and volume of the model's body
are inferred, while the viewer's eye is led to the tender details
of sun spots, a captive bird, and the transparent crimson of the
fingers on the left hand as it touches the top of the hanging cage.
By 1910, when The Bird Cage was painted,
Frieseke was already the acknowledged leader of the American expatriate
painters who summered in the Giverny colony. His favorite theme
was the female figure outdoors, nude or in costume. While at first
Frieseke experienced some difficulties in painting outdoorsnot
the least of which are the racing changes in the subject as the
sun moves, The Bird Cage demonstrates
his absolute confidence in approaching plein-air subjects. The drawing
is graceful and accurate; the shimmering scrim of turning leaves is
vivid and convincing.
When weather permitted, Frieseke painted on the bank of the small
river Epte or in the garden of the house he had rented next to that
of the distinguished elderly painter Claude Monet. Often Sarah, his
wife, posed for him, wearing one of the old costumes they selected
together in the Paris flea markets. The woman in The Bird Cage is
probably Jeanne, a professional model who came out from Paris to
work for Frieseke and for other artists. The mores of Giverny would
not have allowed for a woman from the village to model nudethat
being a sophisticated urban phenomenon. Even the narrative suggestion
of the exposed shoulder of this modelwhatever the design intention
of the artistproposes a degree of intimacy that, in 1910, hinted
at the nude.
Born in Owosso, Michigan, to a family of recent
German immigrants, Frieseke attended the Art Institute of Chicago
and New York's Art Students League before embarking for Paris in
1897. He studied at the Académie Julian and briefly with Whistler at the Académie
Carmen. In 1899 he began to exhibit at the Salon of the Société
Nationale in Paris, after which his work was received with acclaim
both in Europe and at major exhibitions in the United States. Although
he visited the United States occasionally (for the last time in 1928),
France became Frieseke's permanent home. He married Sarah O'Bryan
of Philadelphia in 1905, and Frances, their only child, was born
in Paris in 1914.
Frieseke was particularly known for brilliant garden scenes and for
images of women in interiors. Toward the end of his career, these
subjects took on a more monumental and somber air. In 1920 the Friesekes
purchased a farm in Mesnil-sur-blangy, Normandy, where Frieseke died
in 1939.
Moussa Domit, Frederick Frieseke 1874-1939: A Retrospective
(Savannah, Ga.: Telfair Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1974)
William H. Gerdts, Monet's Giverny: An Impressionist Colony
(New York: Abbeville Press, 1993)
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This essay has been condensed from
a larger manuscript written for the museum's collection catalogue.