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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.
Joseph-Marie Vien (June 18, 1716 March 27, 1809), French painter,
was born at Montpellier. Protected by Comte de Caylus, he entered at
an early age the studio of Natoire, and obtained the grand prix in 1745.
He used his time at Rome in applying to the study of nature and the
development of his own powers all that he gleaned from the masterpieces
around him; but his tendencies were so foreign to the reigning taste
that on his return to Paris he owed his admission to the academy for
his picture "Daedalus and Icarus" (Louvre) solely to the indignant
protests of François Boucher. When in 1776, at the height of
his established reputation, he became director of the school of France
at Rome, he took Jacques-Louis David with him amongst his pupils. After
his return, five years later, his fortunes were wrecked by the French
Revolution; but he undauntedly set to work, and at the age of eighty
(1796) carried off the prize in an open government competition. Napoleon
Bonaparte acknowledged his merit by making him a senator. He died at
Paris, leaving behind him several brilliant pupils, amongst whom were
François-André Vincent, Henri Regnault, Joseph-Benoît
Suvée, François Guillaume Menageot, Jean-Joseph Taillasson
and others of high merit; nor should the name of his wife, Marie-Thérèse
Reboul (1728-1805), herself a member of the academy, be omitted from
this list. Their son, Marie Joseph, born in 1761, also distinguished
himself as a painter.
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