LANGLOIS, Jérôme-Martin - b. 1779 Paris, d. 1838 Paris - WGA

LANGLOIS, Jérôme-Martin

(b. 1779 Paris, d. 1838 Paris)

French painter, the son of a miniature painter who did not approve of his son’s desire to follow in his occupation. Despite these wishes, Langlois trained with Jacques-Louis David and absorbed his Neoclassical style. He won the Prix de Rome in 1809 and studied in Rome for most of the 1810’s. He also exhibited regularly at the Salon beginning in 1805, where he won second prize in 1817 and first prize in 1819. Langlois visited Brussels in 1824 to paint a picture of David. He was admitted to the Académie des Beaux-Arts shortly before his own death.

Cassandra Imploring Minerva's Vengeance against Ajax, Who Has Outraged Her
Cassandra Imploring Minerva's Vengeance against Ajax, Who Has Outraged Her by

Cassandra Imploring Minerva's Vengeance against Ajax, Who Has Outraged Her

Langlois was an assistant in the studio of Jacques-Louis David, whose Neoclassical style strongly influenced Langlois. His historical and mythological paintings were also characterized by their drama and polished rendering of form.

Diana and Endymion
Diana and Endymion by

Diana and Endymion

Portrait of Jacques-Louis David
Portrait of Jacques-Louis David by

Portrait of Jacques-Louis David

David’s features continued to be twisted by the growth of his tumour; the Scottish novelist Sir Walter Scott said that the painter’s face was the most hideous he had ever seen.

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