Paul DELAROCHE (1797 - 1856), after the French... - Lot 241 - Osenat

Lot 241
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Result : 5 250EUR
Paul DELAROCHE (1797 - 1856), after the French... - Lot 241 - Osenat
Paul DELAROCHE (1797 - 1856), after the French School of the 19th century "Napoleon 1st at Fontainebleau on March 31, 1814". Oil on canvas. Gilded wooden frame. 91 x 72.5 cm. (restorations) Biography: Paul DELAROCHE, born Hippolyte De La Roche, on July 17, 1797 in Paris where he died on November 4, 1856, is a French painter. He is the son of a painting expert and was a student of Louis Etienne Watelet and then Antoine - Jean Gros. He began his career at the 1822 Salon, but he was only really noticed at the 1824 Salon, where he exhibited Saint Vincent de Paul preaching for foundlings and Joan of Arc in his prison. He was admitted to the Institute in 1832 and shortly afterwards appointed professor at the School of Fine Arts. He taught until 1843, when a tragic hazing, which caused the death of a student, forced him to close his studio. From 1837 onwards, he stopped exhibiting, but continued to work tirelessly: in 1841, after four years of assiduity, he finished the Hemicycle of the École des Beaux-Arts, an admirable painting that brought together the greatest artists of all periods (there are 75 figures). Paul Delaroche's works were widely distributed in the 19th century thanks to the reproduction, engraved or photographic, to which his art was perfectly adapted, concerned with the historical accuracy of the decoration and costume.
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