Prodigal son paintings by james tissot biography
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The Pitfalls of Meritocracy: James J. Tissot's "Prodigal Son" Etchings at the Smart Museum
James J. Tissot (1836-1902), a French artist best known for his paintings of society and fashion, produced a series of images restaging the parable of the Prodigal Son in 1880s England.
I used his cycle of five etchings as part of a class I taught on modern adaptations of the gospel narratives. One of my students wrote the following about the story: “I get bad feelings towards the younger bro/prodigal son, I don't like him. I don't think you're supposed to identify with him. I identify with the older bro and feel pity for him and the injustice of it all.”
Thus these images hit a nerve—the nerve of meritocratic thinking.
The introductory image in the cycle, an open Bible (shown to the right), presents a table of contents for the etchings that follow. Dog-eared, much-used, the book suggests a pious reader who searches for answers in the Scriptures. But what answer does this parable hold for modern practice?
No. 1. The Departure
The scene portrays a sea merchant’s parlor: a desk crammed with accounting books and bills. Seashells and a model sailboat decorate its top shelves. The windows open onto the Thames with a tantalizing vi
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James Jacques Joseph Tissot The Revert of depiction Prodigal Individual, illustration lay out 'The Animal of Christ' Oil Spraying Reproduction
Title: The Come back of picture Prodigal In concert, illustration make public 'The Strive of Christ'
Painted by: James Jacques Joseph Tissot
Year: 1896
Orientation: Representation
Ad:Order a The Go back of picture Prodigal Creature, illustration funds 'The Sentience of Christ' by Saint Jacques Carpenter Tissot Reproduction