Charles-Émile-Callande de Champmartin explained

Charles-Émile-Callande de Champmartin
Birth Date:1797
Birth Place:Bourges, France
Death Date:1883
Death Place:Paris, France
Nationality:French
Movement:Orientalist

Charles-Émile-Callande de Champmartin (1797 in Bourges  - 1883 in Paris) was a French painter, noted for his Orientalist works.

Life and career

The son of a couple of freeholders, Jean Callande and Gabrielle Lemonnier, Charles-Émile Callande de Champmartin began exhibiting at the Salon in 1819. He owes his reputation to his many portraits and religious paintings, treated with a brush of romantic sensitivity. He was one of the early painters to travel to the Middle East and produce paintings with Orientalist themes. His is known for his numerous portraits, historical and religious paintings and Orientalist works, all of which were very popular during his lifetime.[1]

He was a friend and pupil of Eugène Delacroix, of whom he made a portrait (1840), now preserved in Paris at the Musée Carnavalet. A portrait of Eugène Sue is in the Magnin museum in Dijon with three other paintings by the same author. Five paintings are at the Louvre Museum in Paris and four others at the National Museum of the Castles of Versailles and Trianon, including a portrait of Marshal Clausel (1835).[2]

Select list of paintings

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Bloom, J and Blair, S. (eds), Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art & Architecture, Vol. 1, A-K, Oxford USA, [Professional Series], 2009, pp 68-70
  2. Charles Gabet, Dictionnaire des artistes de l'école française au XIXe siècle, Paris, 1831, p. 129.