Artists
Related: About this forumAstonishing Things: The Drawings of Victor Hugo
I had no idea he was also an artist.
For instance we discover that Hugo campaigned against the death penalty nearly two centuries ago. His 1854 drawing Ecce Lex (Behold the Law) is a macabre inky portrait of a hanged corpse, part of his doomed campaign to save a condemned murderer called John Tapner. Hugo opposed capital punishment on principle, but a few years later gave permission for this drawing to be made into a print protesting the execution of American anti-slavery activist John Brown. If there was a liberal cause, Hugo threw his huge heart into it.
One of the first drawings you encounter in this sensitively curated show is his sketch of the council chamber in the town hall of Thionville in the north-east of France, after it was left in ruins by the invading Prussian army in 1871. Thus, in his late 60s, he added war artist to his vocations of author and campaigner, and recorded the violence of the Franco-Prussian war. In fact, this disaster for France improved his own life. It led to the fall of the dictator Louis Napoleon, whom Hugo had defied, choosing political exile on Guernsey, where he created some of his most haunting art.
That was his public life. Hugo’s art, however, takes you under his skin, without rules or any audience except himself, absolutely free and dauntingly creative. You can feel the isolation and soul-searching in his 1850 sketch Causeway, which dwells on nothing more than a bleak rocky causeway, perhaps his road to exile. In a drawing beside it he ponders the woody morass of a soaking breakwater in Jersey – the first Channel Island to which he fled.
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2025/mar/18/astonishing-things-the-drawings-of-victor-hugo-review-royal-academy
More of his pictures: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2025/mar/01/castles-in-the-sky-the-fantastical-drawings-of-author-victor-hugo-in-pictures

sop
(13,386 posts)Goonch
(3,876 posts)
Easterncedar
(4,129 posts)Perhaps it was called The King of Paris.
It has stayed with me 50 years. He was amazing. But I don’t recall anything about painting. These images are mind blowing.
Martin68
(25,262 posts)Shakespeare. Really? The comparison to Dickens is a bit more credible. They both published their very popular novels in serial form. However, last year I read the count of Monte Cristo and found it very disappointing. The first half is pretty good, but the story eventually devolves into pulp fiction potboiler territory as the narrator's insane obsession with revenge very, very slowly rolls out. I confess I finally found it both boring and a bit farcical in the end. Have you read it recently? I think it might be more impressive to a teenager.
BobTheSubgenius
(11,945 posts)Thanks for this!