Jean Joseph Eleonora Antoine Ansiaux | |
Birth Date: | 1764 |
Birth Place: | Liège, Belgium |
Death Date: | 1840 |
Death Place: | Paris, France |
Jean Joseph Eleonora Antoine Ansiaux (1764–1840) was an Austrian Netherlands-born historical and portrait painter who worked in France.
Ansiaux, a pupil of François-André Vincent, was born in Liège, Belgium, in 1764.
His elder brother, Emmanuel Antoine Joseph Ansiaux (1761-1800), worked in politics and law, a pathway the younger Ansiaux was to have taken before turning to art.[1] [2] [3]
His works, taken from sacred and profane history, and poetical subjects, are numerous, and place him among the best artists of the French school in the 19th century. He also painted portraits of several distinguished persons, ministers, and generals of Napoleon I.
He was known for working in the Romantic-inspired Troubadour style of French historical painting. The Grove Dictionary of Art criticized his works done in this style, calling them "very uneven" and "often laborious."[4]
Ansiaux died in Paris in 1840.
His works include:
Raising of the Cross, 1827.
Resurrection
Richelieu presenting Poussin to Louis XIII, 1817.
Adoration of the Kings.
Ascension, 1812 and Conversion of St. Paul, 1814.
St. John rebuking Herod, 1822 and finding of Moses, 1822.
The Flagellation.