Misplaced Pages

Thomas Degeorge

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
French painter
Thomas Degeorge
BornChristophe Thomas Degeorge
(1786-10-08)October 8, 1786
Blanzat, Province of Auvergne, Kingdom of France
DiedNovember 21, 1854(1854-11-21) (aged 68)
Clermont-Ferrand, Puy-de-Dôme, Second French Empire
EducationJacques-Louis David
OccupationPainter
Parents
  • Anne-François Degeorge
  • Gilberte Vigeral
RelativesGuillaume Degeorge [fr] (brother)

Thomas Degeorge (1786–1854) was a French neoclassical painter. The Musée d'Art Roger-Quilliot [fr] in the Clermont Auvergne Métropole contains several of Degeorge's works.

Biography

Christophe Thomas Degeorge was born the son of lawyer Annet François Degeorge, who later became justice of the peace of Clermont-Ferrand (1831–1841), and Gilberte Vigeral, daughter of a notaire from Vertaizon His brother Guillaume Degeorge [fr] (1787–1868) was an architect in Clermont-Ferrand and built the cour d'appel at Riom. From childhood he showed an interest in drawing. At the age of 8, he studied under a reputed master of art in Clermont, Pierre-Marie Gault de Saint-Germain; at 12, he was capable of meticulously-made, life-like portraits and at 16, he joined the school of Jacques-Louis David.

Gaspard de Chabrol, préfet of Seine, entrusted him with creating several tableaux for the churches of Paris: L'ensevelissement du Christ (The Entombment of Christ, at Saint-Jacques-du-Haut-Pas), Le martyre de saint Jacques le mineur (The Martyrdom of Saint James the Lesser) and a Le Christ à la colonne (Christ at the Column). He painted frescos of allegorical figures for the salle des audiences ('hearings room') of the Tribunal de commerce de Paris and aided Auguste Vinchon with the frescos for the chapel of Saint Maurice at the church of Saint-Sulpice. Possibly due to illness, he failed to win the Prix de Rome scholarship.

Sometime before the July Revolution of 1830, he began La mort de Bonchamps, by personal choice rather than for a commission; it was mentioned in a letter of 1828. After the events of the revolution, however, the subject was no longer considered appropriate, so he interrupted the work. It was only in 1837 that he could present the piece for exhibition at the Louvre, where the count of Montalivet, Minister of the Interior in the government of "citizen-king" Louis Philippe I refused to submit it to the jury for fear of exciting political passions. Appreciating the artistry, however, Montalivet bought the work a little later in the name of the state and offered it to the town of Clermont-Ferrand and, in return, commissioned Degorge to create Le Christ au jardin des Oliviers (Christ in Gethsemane) for the parish church of Notre-Dame de Sancerre.

Around this time, Degeorge left Paris to return to Clermont-Ferrand; while there, he created several portraits of local figures, such as François Dominique de Reynaud, Comte de Montlosier; Clermont mayor Antoine Blatin; Jean Grenier [fr], first president of the Riom appellate court; and general Nicolas Léonard Beker. He also painted rural figures such as le Faucheur ('scyther') and la Petite Glaneuse ('the young gatherer'). He was named a member of the Academy of Sciences, Belle-Lettres and Arts of Clermont-Ferrand [fr]. he was created a chevalier in the Légion d'honneur in 1854.

He married Antoinette Jeanne Delmas de Grammont who, after his death, passed the contents of his atelier to the city, making up around 60 paintings and 2 sketchbooks, which are kept now at the museum.

Works

  • Ulysse et Télémaque tuent les prétendants (Ulysses and Telemachus slaughter the suitors), 1812 Ulysse et Télémaque tuent les prétendants (Ulysses and Telemachus slaughter the suitors), 1812
  • Diagoras porté en triomphe par ses fils à Olympie (Diagoras of Rhodes, carried in triumph by his sons at Olympia), 1814 Diagoras porté en triomphe par ses fils à Olympie (Diagoras of Rhodes, carried in triumph by his sons at Olympia), 1814
  • La mort d'Archimède (Death of Archimedes), 1815 La mort d'Archimède (Death of Archimedes), 1815
  • Œnone refuse de guérir Pâris (Oenone refuses to heal Paris), 1816 Œnone refuse de guérir Pâris (Oenone refuses to heal Paris), 1816
  • La mort de Bonchamps (Death of Bonchamps), 1837 La mort de Bonchamps (Death of Bonchamps), 1837
  • Portrait de Madame Degeorge (1838) Portrait de Madame Degeorge (1838)
  • Portrait de Madame Delaval, 1838 Portrait de Madame Delaval, 1838
  • Autoportrait, 1839 Autoportrait, 1839
  • Le Christ au jardin des Oliviers (Christ in Gethsemane), 1841 Le Christ au jardin des Oliviers (Christ in Gethsemane), 1841
  • Portrait d'Antoine Blatin, 1846 Portrait d'Antoine Blatin, 1846

References

  1. Quérard, Joseph Marie (1856). Le Quérard : Archives d'histoire littéraire, de biographie et de bibliographie françaises. Complément périodique de la France de la France littéraire. Paris: Au bureau du journal. p. 197.
  2. Aleil, Pierre-Franc̦ois (1996). Puy-de-Dôme. Paris: Éditions Bonneton. p. 64. ISBN 9782862532080. OCLC 36464245.
  3. Lecoq, M. M. (1855). Annales scientifiques, littéraires et industrielles de l'Auvergne. Clermont-Ferrand: Thibaud-Landriot Frères. pp. 44–71.
  4. Tardieu, Ambroise . Histoire de Clermont-Ferrand. Vol. II. p. 224.
  5. ^ "La mort de Bonchamps par Degeorge", Puy Story, 20 August 2021, retrieved 24 August 2024, citing E.Vimont, 1892
  6. Base Léonore : Degeorge Christophe Thomas
  7. "Tableau : portrait de Louise Marie de Laval", POP : la plateforme ouverte du patrimoine, Ministry of Culture, retrieved 24 August 2024
  8. Fonquernie, Laurent (1 February 2013). "Thomas Degeorge (1786–1854), Portrait de Madame Delaval, 1838". Institut du Grenat. Retrieved 24 August 2024.
  9. Rykner, Didier (4 February 2011), "Un portrait de femme de Thomas Degeorge acquis par Clermont-Ferrand", La Tribune de l'art, retrieved 24 August 2024
  10. Blog de l'Association des amis des musées de Clermont-Ferrand.
  11. Inventaire général du patrimoine culturel.

Bibliography

External links

Categories:
Thomas Degeorge Add topic