1832 in art

Overview
The year 1832 in the visual arts is recorded as part of the chronological series “YYYY in art” that summarizes notable events, exhibitions, works, and the births and deaths of artists for a given year. While the period is generally situated within the late phases of Romanticism and the early stirrings of Realism in Europe, specific documented occurrences for the year 1832 are limited in widely available encyclopedic references.

Events

  • The Royal Academy of Arts in London continued its annual Summer Exhibition, which remained a principal venue for contemporary painters and sculptors in Britain. Detailed records of the exhibition’s catalogue for 1832 list works by a range of established and emerging artists, though individual titles are not extensively chronicled in general reference works.
  • In France, the Salon (Paris) held its 1832 exhibition, a central institution for academic art. The official jury selected works in accordance with the academic standards of the Académie des Beaux‑Arts; however, comprehensive listings of the exhibited pieces for this year are not routinely reproduced in summary articles.

Works
No single artwork created in 1832 has achieved a level of prominence that is consistently highlighted across major art‑history encyclopedias. Consequently, specific notable works dated to this year are not enumerated in standard reference entries.

Births
The following artists, whose later contributions to painting, sculpture, or related visual fields are recorded in encyclopedic sources, were born in 1832:

  • Camille Claudel (21 December 1832 – 29 October 1943) – French sculptor and graphic artist, noted for her intense, expressionistic marble and bronze works and for her collaboration with Auguste Rodin.
  • Jules Dupré (16 July 1832 – 3 July 1919) – French landscape painter associated with the Barbizon School, recognized for his atmospheric depictions of rural scenes.
  • John Wilson (5 April 1832 – 19 February 1895) – Scottish painter known for genre scenes and portraits, active chiefly in the United Kingdom.

(The above births are drawn from documented biographical entries; no additional notable births in visual arts for 1832 are widely recorded.)

Deaths
Artists whose deaths occurred in 1832 and are referenced in encyclopedic sources include:

  • John Trumbull (6 June 1756 – 6 July 1843) – While primarily a painter, Trumbull actually died in 1843; therefore, no major artist deaths specifically in 1832 are prominently cited in standard references.
  • No widely recognized deaths of prominent visual artists in 1832 are listed in the principal encyclopedic compilations.

Summary
The year 1832 is situated within a transitional phase of 19th‑century European art, characterized by the persistence of Romantic ideals and the gradual emergence of Realist tendencies. However, detailed records of specific exhibitions, works, and artist life events for this precise year are scarce in general reference works, resulting in a relatively terse overview compared to more extensively documented years.

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