VIEN, Joseph-Marie - b. 1716 Montpellier, d. 1809 Paris - WGA

VIEN, Joseph-Marie

(b. 1716 Montpellier, d. 1809 Paris)

French painter. A winner of the Prix de Rome, he was in Rome at a time (1743-50) that coincided with excavations at Herculaneum and Pompeii, and in his lifetime he gained a great reputation (partly self-promoted) as a pioneer of the Neoclassical style. He was enthusiastic for the ideas of Winckelmann, but his classicism was of a very superficial kind, consisting of prim and sentimentalized anecdote or allegory with pseudo-antique trappings ( The Cupid Seller, Château de Fontainebleau, 1763). Nevertheless, he gauged the taste of the time well and had a career of exemplary success, becoming director of the French Academy in Rome (1776) and First Painter to the King (1789). He was made a senator by Napoleon after the Revolution, a count in 1808, and was buried in the Pantheon. David was his most important pupil. His son, Joseph-Marie the Younger (1762-1848), was also a painter, mainly of portraits.

Greek Maidens Adorning a Sleeping Cupid with Flowers
Greek Maidens Adorning a Sleeping Cupid with Flowers by

Greek Maidens Adorning a Sleeping Cupid with Flowers

In 1773 Vien received the patronage of Mme du Barry, who for her Château de Louveciennes commissioned the series of four works depicting the Progress of Love in the Hearts of Young Girls. Two from the series, the Greek Maidens Adorning a Sleeping Cupid with Flowers, and the Lover Crowning his Mistress, are in the Louvre.

La Marchande d'Amours
La Marchande d'Amours by

La Marchande d'Amours

Vien had about 60 students, including Jacques-Louis David, in his studio in the Rue Montmartre in Paris. Although he encouraged his students to paint directly from the life model and to study Renaissance artist, his work suggests that he did not always follow his own advice. This painting treats the subject as a piece of veiled erotica: the image of the Cupid held by his wings promising sexual fulfillment. Despite its classical inspiration, it is effectively a Rococo subject in antique clothing.

Lover Crowning his Mistress
Lover Crowning his Mistress by

Lover Crowning his Mistress

In 1773 Vien received the patronage of Mme du Barry, who for her Château de Louveciennes commissioned the series of four works depicting the Progress of Love in the Hearts of Young Girls. Two from the series, the Greek Maidens Adorning a Sleeping Cupid with Flowers, and the Lover Crowning his Mistress, are in the Louvre.

Marcus Aurelius Distributing Bread to the People
Marcus Aurelius Distributing Bread to the People by

Marcus Aurelius Distributing Bread to the People

Louis XV had Marigny commission a cycle of paintings on the virtues of great rulers. At the Salon of 1765 Vien presented this painting. Diderot commented it: “The pose of Marcus Aurelius is not displeasing; it is simple and natural; but his face is without expression; it is truly unpained, without commiseration, steeped in all the apathy of his cult.” Diderot’s conclusion was that the painting was a “composition without warmth or liveliness, no poetry, no imagination…. they are just so many pieces of card cut out and placed one over another.”

Portrait of the Architect Barthélemy Michel Hazan on Horseback in Mufti
Portrait of the Architect Barthélemy Michel Hazan on Horseback in Mufti by

Portrait of the Architect Barthélemy Michel Hazan on Horseback in Mufti

St Denis Preaching in Gaul
St Denis Preaching in Gaul by

St Denis Preaching in Gaul

The Sleeping Hermit
The Sleeping Hermit by

The Sleeping Hermit

This painting was presented at the Salon of 1753 in Paris.

Venus Showing Mars her Doves Making a Nest in his Helmet
Venus Showing Mars her Doves Making a Nest in his Helmet by

Venus Showing Mars her Doves Making a Nest in his Helmet

The choice of the subject of this painting was suggested by Diderot. The painting, sent to Russia without being exhibited at the Salon, was not a success, which angered Diderot.

Venus, Wounded by Diomedes, Is Saved by Iris
Venus, Wounded by Diomedes, Is Saved by Iris by

Venus, Wounded by Diomedes, Is Saved by Iris

Women in Classical Dress Attending a Young Bride
Women in Classical Dress Attending a Young Bride by

Women in Classical Dress Attending a Young Bride

This painting is one of the artist’s finest works in the Neo-classical style, and the first of four major works painted by the artist during his tenure as Director of the French Academy in Rome. Though history and religious painting dominated his early career, influenced by a particular interest in Italian Baroque painting, Vien went on to become one of the earliest proponents in France of Neo-clacissism.

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