Claude-Marie Dubufe
Claude-Marie Dubufe | |
---|---|
Born | Claude-Marie Dubufe 1790 Paris, France |
Died | 1864 Selle-Saint-Cloud, France |
Nationality | French |
Education | Jacques-Louis David |
Known for | Genre and Portrait Painting |
Claude-Marie-Paul Dubufe (1790–1864) a French historical, genre and portrait painter, was born in Paris in 1790, and studied under Jacques-Louis David. His subjects were at first classical, and then scriptural. He then gave himself up to the painting of genre pictures and portraits.[1] His reputation rests chiefly on his portraits, of which he produced a large number. Dubufe, who was the last representative of the school of David, died at Selle-Saint-Cloud in 1864.
Works
[edit]- A Roman suffering starvation with his family rather than touch a sum of money entrusted to him. 1810.
- Christ allaying the tempest. 1819.
- Apollo and Cyparissus. 1822. (Musée Calvet - Avignon)
- The Birth of the Duke of Bordeaux. 1824. (Orleans Museum.)
- The Passage of the Bidassoa. 1824.
- Four frescoes representing 'Egypt,' &c. (Conseil d'État, Paris.)
- The Surprise. 1828. (National Gallery, London.)
- Portrait of Louis Philippe.
- Portrait of General Montesquiou-Fezenzac (Versailles).
- Portrait of Nicholas Koechlin. 1841.
- Portrait of the Queen of the Belgians.
- Portrait of Virginie de Ternant (Marquise de Dansville-Sur-Meuse) (False River, Louisiana).
- Portrait of Marius Claude Vincent de Ternant (False River, Louisiana).
- Portrait of Marie Virginie Avegno (nee' de Ternant) (False River, Louisiana).
- Portrait of Julie Euriphile de Ternant (False River, Louisiana).
- Portrait of Micaela Almonester, Baroness de Pontalba. 1841.
Gallery
[edit]- Anne-Louise Alix de Montmorency, with her daughter, ca. 1840
- Eleonor Jenkinson
Notes
[edit]- ^ New International Encyclopedia. 1905. .
References
[edit]- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bryan, Michael (1886). "Dubufe, Claude Marie". In Graves, Robert Edmund (ed.). Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (A–K). Vol. I (3rd ed.). London: George Bell & Sons.