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Artist Biography
Baron Francois Gerard (1770-1837),
French

Baron Francois Gerard
was one of the great official artists from the time if the directorate up
to that of Louis Philippe. He was a pupil of David, knight of the Legion
of Honor (Bonaparte), baron (Louis XVIII), chief painter to Josephine,
then to the king.
Francois Gerard, son of the steward of Cardinal de Bernis, French
ambassador to the Holy See, spent his early years in Rome. The family
returned to France in 1780. Thanks to the protection of M. de Breteuil,
minister to the kinmg's household, in whose service his father then was,
Francois Gerard was admitted to the king's pension, a small establishment
founded by M. de Marigny to accommodate twelve young artists.
Subsequently he entered the studios of the sculptor Pajou and that of the
painter Brenet before entering that of David in 1786. In 1789 he won the
second place Prix de Rome with Joseph Making Himself Known to his Brothers
(Angers), while Girodet won the first prize. In April of 1791 he left for
Italy with his mother and brothers and remained there until 1793.
On his return to Rome he obtained lodgings and a studio in the Louvre.
With intervention by David he escaped being drafted into the army. In the
Salon of 1795 he made himself noticed with his Belisarius, painted in
hardly eighteen days. He knew hard times and survived thanks to the order
David obtained for him for illustrations for Freres Didot editions of
Vergil and Racine.
Gerard began to make a name for himself as a portrait painter with his
portrait of Isabey, painted in 1796 (Louvre) and that of Countess Regnault
de Saint Jean of Angely, much admired in the Salon of 1799 (Louvre).
The great success which his Psyche and Cupid met with in 1798 assured the
success of the artist who in 1800 received orders from Bonaparte, official
portraits and decorations of Ossian for Malmaison. Busied with innumerable
portrait of the imperial family and the great dignitaries of the empire,
Gerard hardly found time to work with other sorts of pictures. It was that
way with the original version of Napoleon I in the dress for the
Consecration, ordered for the offices of the minister of foreign
relations.
The artist knew how to portray the imperial dignity and majesty. He was
ordered to make innumerable replicas of it to decorate the state rooms of
consular and diplomatic residences in foreign countries. In 1809 some of
them were presented to great princely dignitaries of the empire.
In 1810, however, he was able to display The Battle of Austerlitz
(Versailles). In 1814 he chose the Bourbons and, protected by Talleyrand,
entered the service of Louis XVIII. He showed in the Salon a portrait of
the king on foot (Versailles) and received the order for The Entry of
Henry IV into Paris (Versailles), a monumental canvas which appeared in
the Salon of 1817. In 1819 he painted for Augustus of Prussia a Corinne at
Cape Misenum (Lyon) and copied it for Mme du Cayla, a favorite of Louis
XVIII (Salon of 1822). In 1824 he displayed Daphnis and Chloe (Louvre),
and in 1827 he began the Consecration of Charles X, an enormous
composition which he finished in 1829 (Versailles).
Covered with honors, a member of most of the academies of Europe, he had
then an immense reputation. Knight of the Legion of Honor since 1802,
first painter to Empress Josephine in 1806, professor at the School of
Fine Arts in 1811, member of the Institute the following year, he was
named first painter to the king in 1817 and baron in 1819.
Baron Gerard continued his activities under the July monarchy. In 1831 he
painted King Louis Philippe. In 1832 he delivered colossal allegories for
the histoy gallery of Versailles: Warlike Courage, Clemency, Constancy. In
1836 he finally completed the decoration of the four pendentives in the
cupola of the Pantheon which had been ordered from him in 1820.
Assisted by numerous collaborators, Gerard left behind him an abundance
which includes about thirty historical paintings, innumerable portraits
including eighty seven full length ones. The influence of David which is
evident in his historic paintings is, however, tempered in his portraits
by a certain sensuality characteristic of the artist, one of the most
brilliant portrait painters of his generation.
Baron Francois
Gerard Oil
Paintings Reproductions:
Caroline Murat and her Children 60cm x 80cm (24" x 32") $289 Constance Ossolinska Lubienska 60cm x 75cm (24" x 30") $289 Jean-Baptiste Isabey and his Daughter 50cm x 80cm (20" x 32") $279 - The Haggin Museum, Stockton La Comtesse Regnault de Saint-Jean d'Angely 50cm x 80cm (20" x 32") $279 - The Haggin Museum, Stockton
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