Forgien palette: Was Le Douanier Rousseau a childish genius?
His savoir faire remains as enigmatic as his name itself. It is no wonder that Le Douanier Rousseau has continued to intrigue, but at the same time irritate, many art enthusiasts, who have been attracted by his paintings, for well over a century now.
Born in 1844 in the town of Laval in France, Henri Julien Felix Rousseau would start working in the customs department in Paris, after finishing his law studies. With no formal education in art, he began painting only in his late 30s; “pushed by the spirits”, as he would describe the reason for his entry into the world of creativity.
Although he signed his works with his real name, the sobriquet Le Douanier, (or the Customs Officer), would stick to his reputation forever.
Ridiculed during his life, Henri Julien Felix Rousseau came to be recognised as a self-taught genius whose works are of high artistic quality
Rousseau’s early paintings were the result of his daily walks at lunchtime in le Jardin des Plantes, a garden close to the office where he worked. Here he saw trees, leaves, grass, and flowers not like everyone else but in minute detail, as if they were all placed under an imaginary microscope before his eyes. These impulsive visuals also miraculously transformed the ants, butterflies, and lizards that he observed in the garden, into the wild beasts, snakes, and eagles of his world of fantasies. When he returned home after work, he painted the strange scenes on canvases but was too afraid to show them to anyone.