Antoine Ponchin Explained

Antoine Marius Simon Ponchin (29 October 1872, Marseille - 15 December 1933, Paris) was a French Impressionist landscape painter.

Biography

His father, Joseph Marius Ponchin (1846-1891) was also a painter. He was a student of, Julien Gustave Gagliardini and Jean-Baptiste Olive. From 1893 until his death, he was a regular exhibitor at the Salon. He received honorable mention there in 1904 and a third-class medal in 1906, the same year he was awarded the Prix de Raigecourt-Goyon for landscape painting. In 1910, he received a second-class medal.

In 1922, after having participated in the and being awarded the Prix de l'Indochine, he was sent on a mission to Hanoi by the Colonial Ministry. He was accompanied by his son, Joseph Henri (1897-1981), who was also a painter. Together, they decorated the new Lycée Albert-Sarraut.[1]

The mission was a great success and he was nominated for the Legion of Honor by Albert Sarraut himself, who was then the Colonial Minister. That same year, he was named a Knight in the Legion.

His works may be seen at the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Chambéry, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Nîmes, the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rouen and the Huntsville Museum of Art.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. http://alasweb.free.fr/Bulletins/Bull%20181%201e%20tr%202008/une_famille_de_peintres.htm Association des anciens du lycée Albert-Sarraut