The 9 square puzzle using
the fine painting by French artist James Tissot (1836-1902). When the puzzle is complete, you will jump to a 16 square puzzle with the same image.
You can go there directly by clicking the red square.
Information about the artist and the painting is at the
page bottom.
The 16
square puzzle using the fine painting by French artist James Tissot. When the puzzle is complete, you will jump to a 25
square puzzle with the same image.
You can go there directly by clicking the red square.
The 25 square
puzzle using the fine painting by French artist James Tissot. When the puzzle is complete, you will jump to a 36 square puzzle
with the same image.
You can go there directly by clicking the red square.
The 36 square
puzzle using the fine painting by French artist James Tissot. When the puzzle is complete, you will jump to a 49 square puzzle with the same image.
You can go there directly by clicking the red square.
The 49 square puzzle
using using the fine painting by French artist James Tissot. When the
puzzle is complete, you will jump to a 64 square puzzle with the same image.
You can go there directly by clicking the red square.
The 64 square puzzle using using the fine painting by French artist James Tissot. This
puzzle is getting harder yet with such a large image a puzzle with even more pieces would surely work well.
Congratulations if you succeed. The applet permits up to a ten square puzzle. If there is any interest in my listing
a puzzle of greater difficulty, drop me a
line and I'll add it in.
Information about the artist and the painting can be found below.
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The image is of the major portion of a painting by French artist James Tissot
(1836-1902) entitled "The Gallery of HMS Calcutta" painted in 1877. You may see the original image
on Carol Gerten's wonderful site (CGFA) here along with many other of James Tissot's paintings. Many many more images of
his paintings are
available here. This particular painting is in the Tate Gallery in London, England. I direct
you to any search engine for more
of James Tissot's body of work, but access to his major works & their locations can be found
here.
Jacques-Joseph Tissot was born Oct. 15, 1836, at Nantes near the mouth of the
Loire river in western France, the son of Marcel-Théodore Tissot, a draper and merchant
& Marie Durand a
milliner. His initial interest was in architecture but he studied art in Paris at the École des Beaux-Arts.
Here he met artists Edgar Degas & James McNeill Whistler, and soon had anglicized his first name to
James. For a number of years he painted medieval subjects but soon favoured scenes of modern life,
a field in which he was to excel. He attracted numerous patrons & by the late 1860s was earning a
handsome income and had a substantial home in the Bois de Boulogne. In 1870-71 he joined the
National Guard during the Franco-Prussian War & participated in the unsuccessful defence of Paris.
During the unrest that followed the war & saw the establishment of the Third Republic, Tissot was
suspected of being involved in the Paris Commune, a short-lived government set up by socialist
revolutionaries. He was forced to give up his successful career in Paris, and moved to London, where he soon
resurrected his reputation & found patrons for his art. He stayed in England
from 1871 to 1882.
He continued his interest in modern-life subjects now in such English settings such as the
Thames, the streets of London, shipping and seaside resort towns (the HMS Calcutta was in
Portsmouth). He was fascinated with etiquette, interior décor, elegant accessories and fashion. John Ruskin
unkindly described Tissot's work as "mere colored photographs of vulgar society"! His pictures were in fact
often described as "vulgar," but they were none the less eagerly purchased. His own social
position put him
at risk of being also seen as vulgar. In 1876, Tissot met Mrs. Kathleen Irene Kelly Newton, a beautiful
Irish woman whose marriage to a surgeon in the Indian Civil Service had ended in divorce. 18 years his junior,
she became his mistress, & moved into his home at about the time she had an illegitimate son, believed to
be Tissot's. The fact that she was a divorcée with a child prevented their marriage, and they
were careful to hide the relationship. However, Tissot painted her many times & some of his greatest
and best-known paintings and
etchings are of her. In 1882, Mrs. Newton died of tuberculosis in
Tissot's home at the young age of 28. Distraught at her death, Tissot left
London for Paris within days of her passing.
After Newton’s death, Tissot became interested in spiritualism and soon had embraced
more traditional forms of religion. He travelled three times to the Holy Land gathering material
for his illustrated book Life of Our Saviour Jesus Christ and preparing for
an illustrated Hebrew Old Testament, finalised by his assistants and published in 1904, two years after
his death. In his final years he lived a
reclusive life in Paris & died at his family's home, Château de Buillon, near Besançon, France, on Aug. 8,
1902 (or was it Aug. 3, 1902?).
Biographic material in greater depth can be found at a fine webpage
entitled "Who is James Tissot?" and you may click here for more data. A splendid large image of
"Hide and Seek" c. 1877 appears on the National Gallery
of Art, Washington, D.C. childrens site. A cross stich pattern of "The Gallery of HMS Calcutta" used to be available. And here is "London
Visitors" c. 1873/4, a very lovely
Tissot painting with St. Martin-in-the-Fields Church in the background. Familiar territory to the
webmaster whose office was
on Northumberland Avenue, very close to Trafalgar Square, many moons ago!
While I indicate that "The Gallery of HMS Calcutta" was painted in 1877, the
Tate Gallery website says that it was c. 1876. I do not know which date is correct. The Tate Gallery also
says James Tissot was an English artist! The Art Gallery of Ontario, the source of the above etching, says he was
born in 1834 & died in 1903 and was an American!
Return to top of page.
The java applet that runs the puzzle is courtesy of Axel Fontaine, who lives
just south of the city of Brussels in Belgium. Axel invited free use of his fine applet which you can, I hope,
download here. Axel, we thank you!
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