Louis-Jean-Baptiste BOULANGÉ. France (1812-1878)
“Untitled ”

 

 

Description

Louis Jean-Baptiste Boulangé was a French landscape painter born in 1812. Boulangé spent most of his career in Paris and travelled extensively to surrounding, rural areas. He moved to Paris as a young adult where he gravitated to the center of the city's thriving art scene. He was fortunate enough to receive artistic training from Eugene Delacroix, a leader of the French Romantic School. Delacroix is known for his painting "Liberty Leading the People", which now hangs in the Louvre. While Boulangé's foundation as a painter was molded by Delacroix's masterful teachings, he soon departed in his own direction. Boulangé became more interested in painting from nature. He painted a number of floral arrangements in his studio, studying compositions and botanical forms. When Boulangé was not in his studio he spent much of his time outside painting in the woods and gardens surrounding Paris. He became an important landscape painter of the Barbizon School, named after the village of Barbizon near the Fontainbleau Forest. The artists would gather to sketch outdoors and then return to their studios to execute carefully rendered paintings. The Barbizon School was formed around 1830 and lasted until around 1870. Boulangé worked with the leaders of the Barbizon School, including Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot, Théodore Rousseau, Jean-François Millet and Charles-François Daubigny. Boulangé painted many scenes of Fontainbleau as well as the Ardennes, a sprawling region of forests and mountains that extends from Belgium into France.

He was successful during his lifetime and often exhibited in Paris. He was proudly accepted into the Paris Salon of 1845.

Oil on canvas.

Signed lower right.

Dimensions

18 1/2 inches by 15 1/4 inches. 46cm by 38cm.

Price
$2,500.00

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