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CONDITION:
Clear and sharp with beautiful detail. As scanned.
Blank on the back. Heavier paper. This beautiful print would look great
matted and framed. Or an art supply store can provide you with a selection
of frames for old art treasures.
French painter, designer and printmaker. In 1821 he entered
the atelier of Fleury Richard in the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Lyon. He
exhibited for the first time at the Lyon Salon of 1822, in 1824 receiving
a first-class medal at the Paris Salon for a Prison Courtyard (untraced).
He lived in Lyon until his mothers death in 1836, when he settled
in Paris. During the 1830s his pictures sold well: Louis-Philippe bought
seven paintings for Versailles, and commissioned cartoons of the Death
of the Duc dOrléans (1847) for the stained-glass windows
of the Chapelle St Ferdinand at Dreux. Although the fall of Louis-Philippe
in 1848 deprived Jacquand of official commissions, financial mismanagement
of the family polish factory obliged him to earn his living from painting.
Between 1852 and 1855 he lived in Boulogne-sur-Mer where he decorated
the Salle dhonneur in the Hôtel de Ville. He also obtained
the commission for several paintings (1852-54) for Notre-Dame, Roubaix.
Government commissions gradually returned: he was asked to decorate
the chapel of the Virgin in St Philippe du Roule, Paris (1858-60), and
the chapel of St Bernard, St Bernard de la Chapelle, Paris (1867). Jacquand
also painted the archivolt of the chapel of the Virgin, St Martin dAinay,
Lyon (1863). He was a frequent exhibitor at the Paris Salon until the
year before his death, specialising in anecdotal historical scenes.
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