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Medium and Message: On a cigar-box

Oil paint has been applied to many different supports, of which the most popular and enduring have been wooden panels and stretched canvas. Panels have tended to become uncommon in recent centuries because of their weight and cost, but in the nineteenth century reappeared in novel form among those sketching in front of the motif, who took to using wood from cigar boxes.

Smoking cigars became popular during that century, particularly among the better-off living in cities. Made from chopped tobacco wrapped in a tobacco leaf, cigars are delicate and affected by humidity, so are sold in small wooden boxes often made from cedar wood. Their lids, particularly those of about 13 by 26 cm (5 x 10 inches) size, were repurposed as the support for many oil sketches. When reading their description, if they’re given as oil on panel with similar dimensions, you should suspect that they may well have been painted on a cigar-box.

The earliest artists who are known to have painted on cigar-boxes are the Italian painters known as the Macchiaioli, a breakaway movement centred on Tuscany in northern Italy from about 1850, that in many ways anticipated Impressionism.

Odoardo Borrani, Peasant Child at Castiglioncello (c 1865), oil on panel, 23.3 x 14.7 cm, Private collection. Wikimedia Commons.
Odoardo Borrani (1833-1905), Peasant Child at Castiglioncello (c 1865), oil on panel, 23.3 x 14.7 cm, Private collection. Wikimedia Commons.

Odoardo Borrani joined the Macchiaioli in 1855, and in about 1865 painted this Peasant Child at Castiglioncello on a wooden panel of 23.3 x 14.7 cm that had almost certainly originated in a cigar box. The unusual linear cracks seen here are characteristic of the thin cedar wood popular in cigar boxes, when used without an adequate ground.

Giovanni Fattori, The Rotonda at Palmieri (1866), oil on panel, 12 x 35 cm, Galleria d'Arte Moderna di Palazzo Pitti, Florence. WikiArt.
Giovanni Fattori (1825-1908), The Rotonda at Palmieri (1866), oil on panel, 12 x 35 cm, Galleria d’Arte Moderna di Palazzo Pitti, Florence. WikiArt.

Giovanni Fattori’s plein air paintings are characteristic of the Macchiaioli: using small panoramic wood panels, he painted in macchia (taches or patches), in a style not dissimilar to that of the Barbizon School in France. This panel showing The Rotonda at Palmieri (1866) is slightly wider at 12 x 35 cm.

Giovanni Fattori, Portrait of Silvestro Lega, Painting Beside the Sea (1866-7), oil on panel, 12.5 x 28 cm, Private collection. WikiArt.
Giovanni Fattori (1825-1908), Portrait of Silvestro Lega, Painting Beside the Sea (1866-7), oil on panel, 12.5 x 28 cm, Private collection. WikiArt.

Fattori’s Portrait of Silvestro Lega, Painting Beside the Sea from 1866-67 is on another panel of 12.5 x 28 cm. This also shows the underlying grain, and its lack of any substantial ground. The artist shown appears to be painting in a pochade box onto another panel that may well be a cigar box.

Later in the century others followed, among them James Abbott McNeill Whistler.

whistlerharmonybluepearl
James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834-1903), Harmony in Blue and Pearl: The Sands, Dieppe (c 1885), oil on panel, 14 x 22.9 cm, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, Australia. Wikimedia Commons.

In the 1880s, Whistler painted small outdoor views on panels, such as Harmony in Blue and Pearl: The Sands, Dieppe from about 1885. Although its dimensions are slightly different at 14 x 22.9 cm, this is almost certainly on a cigar box. The vertical streaks seen here are probably the result of a thin ground underneath the surface paint layer.

The greatest European exponent of painting on these small wooden panels was Georges Seurat, who mostly used them for studies made in preparation for his larger paintings. When Seurat started work on his monumental painting Les Poseuses (Posers, or Models) in 1886, he made a series of figure studies that are now in the Musée d’Orsay.

seuratmodelback
Georges Seurat (1859–1891), Model from the Back (study for Poseuses) (1887), oil on wood, 24.4 x 15.7 cm, Musée d’Orsay, Paris. Wikimedia Commons.
seuratmodelstanding
Georges Seurat (1859–1891), Model Standing (study for Poseuses) (1887), oil on wood, 26 x 17.2 cm, Musée d’Orsay, Paris. Wikimedia Commons.
seuratmodelprofile
Georges Seurat (1859–1891), Model in Profile (study for Poseuses) (1887), oil on wood, 24 x 14.6 cm, Musée d’Orsay, Paris. Wikimedia Commons.

Each was painted using Seurat’s Divisionist technique on the wooden lid of a cigar box of about 24 by 15 cm size, which the artist termed a croqueton, his favourite support for such sketches.

In the late 1880s, several artists started painting in the rural area of Heidelberg, east of Melbourne, adopting a style that later became known as Australian Impressionism. They came together in a momentous exhibition in the history of Australian art, the 9 by 5 Impression Exhibition, in Melbourne, in 1889, named from the dimensions in inches of the standard Australian cigar-box lid of 13 by 23 cm.

Its principal artists were Charles Conder, Tom Roberts, and Arthur Streeton, many of whose rough-worked and colourful plein air sketches were painted on cigar boxes.

Tom Roberts, Going Home (c 1889), oil on wood panel, 23.4 x 13.6 cm, National Gallery of Australia, Parkes, ACT. Wikimedia Commons.
Tom Roberts (1856-1931), Going Home (c 1889), oil on wood panel, 23.4 x 13.6 cm, National Gallery of Australia, Parkes, ACT. Wikimedia Commons.

Roberts’ Going Home from about 1889 has dimensions of 23.4 x 13.6 cm. Linear marks in the lower section appear to be the result of the grain in the wood.

Tom Roberts, Hutt Valley (1900), oil on panel, 10.3 x 19.1 cm, The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington, NZ. Wikimedia Commons.
Tom Roberts (1856-1931), Hutt Valley (1900), oil on panel, 10.3 x 19.1 cm, The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington, NZ. Wikimedia Commons.

His oil sketch of Hutt Valley from 1900 is slightly smaller at 10.3 x 19.1 cm.

Charles Conder, Dandenongs from Heidelberg (c 1889), oil on wood panel, 11.5 x 23.5 cm, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. Wikimedia Commons.
Charles Conder (1868-1909), Dandenongs from Heidelberg (c 1889), oil on wood panel, 11.5 x 23.5 cm, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. Wikimedia Commons.

Conder’s view of the Dandenongs from Heidelberg from about 1889 uses a more standard size of 11.5 x 23.5 cm.

Charles Conder, Ricketts Point, Beaumaris (1890), oil on wood panel, 12 x 21.5 cm, National Gallery of Australia, Parkes, ACT. Wikimedia Commons.
Charles Conder (1868-1909), Ricketts Point, Beaumaris (1890), oil on wood panel, 12 x 21.5 cm, National Gallery of Australia, Parkes, ACT. Wikimedia Commons.

His Ricketts Point, Beaumaris (1890) is 12 x 21.5 cm with rounded corners.

In the twentieth century, many smokers switched to cigarettes sold in cardboard packets, and the supply of cigar-boxes dried up.

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