Prayer in the Saint Pierre Cathedral in Geneva - Ferdinand Hodler
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Description
A study of the Saint Pierre Cathedral in Geneva, capturing the solemn atmosphere of a Protestant service through architectural precision and muted tones.
Ferdinand Hodler, a central figure in Swiss art at the turn of the twentieth century, produced this interior study of the Saint Pierre Cathedral in Geneva during a period when he was moving away from strict realism towards a more structured, symbolic approach. The composition captures the austere atmosphere of the Protestant cathedral, focusing on the interplay between the architectural geometry of the Gothic arches and the human figures gathered for worship. The painting depicts a preacher positioned high within the ornate wooden pulpit, elevated above the congregation. Below, the figures are rendered with a sense of quietude, their postures reflecting the solemnity of the setting. Hodler employs a muted palette, dominated by earthy browns, ochres, and the dark tones of the congregants' attire, which contrasts with the pale, vertical lines of the stone columns. The light filtering through the windows provides a subtle illumination, drawing the eye towards the depth of the apse. Unlike his later, more rigid compositions that emphasised symmetry and parallelism, this work retains a degree of spontaneity in the brushwork. It documents the specific architectural character of the cathedral, which served as the home church of John Calvin. Hodler manages to balance the physical scale of the building with the individual presence of the worshippers. The work offers a view into the social and religious life of Geneva during the late nineteenth century, presented through the lens of an artist who was increasingly interested in the relationship between human existence and the spaces we inhabit. The focus remains on the structural rhythm of the interior, where the repetition of the arches creates a sense of order and stillness.
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Prayer in the Saint Pierre Cathedral in Geneva - Ferdinand Hodler
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Museum-grade giclée on FSC-certified archival matte paper, with framed and canvas options.
- Paper sizes: A4, A3, A2, A1, A0 and B2 (50×70 cm)
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Artist Biography
Ferdinand Hodler
He studied under Barthelemy Menn in Geneva, absorbing influences from Courbet and Holbein that seem contradictory but make sense in his work: physical realism combined with formal symmetry. By the 1890s he had developed Parallelism, a system of compositional repetition where figures, gestures and landscape elements mirror each other across the canvas. He described it as an element of order inherent in nature, visible in reflections on water, in the symmetry of the human body, in the repetition of mountain forms.
The Swiss National Bank commissioned him in 1908 to design currency. Rather than portraits of statesmen, he chose a woodcutter for the 50-franc note and a reaper for the 100-franc note. Both entered circulation in 1911. His figures occupy Swiss banknotes the way his figures occupy his paintings: monumental, frontal, and slightly too symmetrical to be comfortable.
His son Hector founded the World Esperanto Association in 1908, which is a detail that belongs in the biography of any artist whose life's work concerned the search for universal order. Hodler was Switzerland's first modern painter, and the one who proved you could stay in Switzerland and still matter. He died in Geneva in 1918, having painted the view of Lake Geneva from his window every day during his final illness. The series of paintings recording the changing light over the lake is among his most moving work.
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