Member of the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture
On June 28, 1675, Focus handed over his admission painting and then swore an oath as a member of the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture.[2] His admission piece, a landscape painting, was still preserved at the time of the French Revolution, but it was considered lost in 1910. Focus actively participated in the life of the Academy until 1681, and his name still appears in registers in 1683.[2][1]
In 1679, he painted sixteen small landscape paintings for the apartments of the Dukes of Chevreuse and Beauvilliers in the Palace of Versailles, and received 480 livres for his work.[2] They may have been overdoors, and are now considered lost.[3]
The catalog of Focus engraved work was established first by Robert-Dumesnil (1836), then by Weigert as part of the effort to organize the French prints' department at the National French Library (1961). Only eight pieces are known, including a series of six prints representing Roman landscapes, dedicated to Charles Le Brun and published by Girard Audran in 1678.
Drawings by Focus have also been preserved, be they preparatory to his prints (School of Fine Arts, Besançon Museum) or independent from them (Louvre Museum). A much freer style drawing is kept in the Chicago Art Institute.[2]
Madness and internment
After he became mad, Focus was hospitalized in the asylum of "Petites maisons". There he drew around 1694 several dozens of drawings affected by his mental troubles. He seemed to take himself for the king of France or the Pope, believed to be persecuted by the Academy's members, or threatened by the Beast of Gâtinais, a famous feral wolf. His drawings include cartouches filled with texts containing numerous anecdotes about his life, his associates and his contemporaries.[2] These drawings might have been saved by close relatives of Focus, and they have been preserved until the 21st century because of their artistic quality[1]
His contemporaries would probably have characterized Focus' mental state as "mania";[4] Bernard Granger, professor of psychiatry at René Descartes University, proposes, with all due caution, the retrospective diagnosis of schizo-affective disorder.[5]
Death and posterity
According to Mariette, who wrote half a century after his death, Focus died at the Petites Maisons on February 27, 1708 (February 26, according to the list of academicians).
His work falls into oblivion until the end of the 20th century. A box kept since 1780 in a private family archive that contains a set of sheets signed by Focus was rediscovered in Paris in 2010.[6] An exhibition at the Palais des Beaux Arts in Paris, in 2018, allowed for a fresh look on the "written drawings" of this crazy artist from the seventeenth century.[6]
^ abcdefgC. Michel, "La vie de Georges Focus", in E. Brugerolles (ed.), Georges Focus. la folie d'un peintre de Louis XIV (Paris, 2018), p. 35-47.
^ abcdefEmmanuelle Brugerolles et David Guillet, « Georges Focus (v. 1639/1640-1708), peintre de paysage de l'Académie royale, mort fou "renfermé aux petites maisons" », Revue du Louvre, 1993, vol. 1, p. 28-39
^E. Brugerolles, Focus paysagiste, in E. Brugerolle (ed.), Georges Focus. La folie d'un peintre de Louis XIV (Paris, 2018), p. 49-54.
^J. Coste, "Focus et les Petites Maisons", in E. Brugerolles (ed.), Georges Focus. la folie d'un peintre de Louis XIV (Paris, 2018), p. 91-95.
^B. Granger, "La folie de Georges Focus : tentative de diagnostic rétrospectif", in E. Brugerolles (ed.), Georges Focus. la folie d'un peintre de Louis XIV (Paris, 2018), p. 97-103.
Emmanuelle Brugerolles, ed. (2018). Georges Focus. La Folie d'un peintre de Louis XIV. Paris: Beaux-Arts de Paris éditions. p. 400. ISBN978-2-8405-6544-4.