The Cleveland Museum of Art (spacer)
Special Exhibitions
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French Master Drawings
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French Master Drawings

Highlights of the Exhibition


Luc-Olivier Merson (Paris 1846-1920). <I>Nôtre-Dame de Paris</I>, c. 1881.
Luc-Olivier Merson (1846-1920).
Nôtre-Dame de Paris, about 1881.
Pen and black ink, brush and gray wash, black and white gouache, and graphite; 326 x 217 mm
Collection of Muriel Butkin
[cat. no. 56]

Luc-Olivier Merson
Nôtre-Dame de Paris

Victor Hugo's celebrated 1831 novel Nôtre-Dame de Paris,tells the story of the grotesque and deformed Quasimodo, an orphan raised by Claude Frollo, the archdeacon of the church of Notre Dame in Paris. Hugo's novel became an important influence on many artists and helped to define a poetic view of the medieval period and of Gothic architecture that lasted well into the second half of the century.

The sheet's imagery brings to mind a passage from the text: "The transept belfry and the two towers were to him three great cages, the birds in which, taught by him, would sing for him alone."


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Design for the Divertissement from "La Pastorale"