Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on “September Morn” by Paul Chabas. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper which examines the painting
“September Morn” by Paul Chabas. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAchabas.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
nude setting. It was painted in the early 20th century and actually took three summers to paint (Bull, 1998). It is a relatively simple painting, but one filled with discretion
as well as profound beauty. In the following paper we examine the painting, discussing elements and the history of the painting. September Morn "On a September morning in
1912, French painter Paul Chabas finished the painting he had been working on for three consecutive summers. Thus completed, it was aptly titled Matinee de Septembre (September Morn). As was
typical of his style, the painting was of young maiden posed nude in a natural setting" (Bull, 1998; sptmrn.html). We note that the "the icy morning waters of Lake Annecy
in Upper Savoy formed the natural setting and the maiden was a local peasant girl. The head, however, had been painted from the sketch of a young American girl, Julie
Phillips (later Mrs. Thompson), which he had made while she and her mother were sitting in a Paris cafe" (Bull, 1998; sptmrn.html). He had apparently found something incredibly intriguing in
this womans face as he looked upon her profile (Bull, 1998). "The completed painting was then sent off to the Paris Salon of 1912 to be exhibited. Although the painting
won Mr. Chabas the Medal of Honor, it caused no flurry of attention" in terms of producing a buyer (Bull, 1998; sptmrn.html). Because he had wanted to sell the painting
he shipped the painting to an American gallery in the hopes of finding a buyer (Bull, 1998). "It was here in America that the painting was destined to
receive undreamed of publicity and popularity. One day in May of 1913, displayed in the window of a Manhattan art gallery, it caught the eye of Anthony Comstock, head of
...