Théophile Hamel Explained

Théophile Hamel
Birth Date:1817 11, df=y
Birth Place:Sainte-Foy, Quebec, Canada
Death Place:Quebec City, Quebec, Canada
Field:Painter

Théophile-Abraham Hamel (8 November 1817  - 23 December 1870) was a Canadian artist who painted mainly portraits and religious images in 19th-century Quebec.[1]

Life

Hamel was born in 1817 in Sainte-Foy (then a suburb of Quebec City), the son of a successful farmer. Hamel's paternal ancestry can be traced to French immigrant Jean Hamel, who arrived in New France from Avremesnil (Normandy) in 1656. In 1834 Théophile was already taking art lessons from Antoine Plamondon. For a while he attended the Accademia di San Luca, in Rome. He was very much interested in the works of the Romantics.[2]

Career

His early portraits show a mixture of European romanticism and Canadian simplicity. His style gradually changed to match the taste of his clients for simple, honest, even prim portraits.[3]

In 1838 he painted 'Three Indian Chiefs Leading a Delegation to Quebec. In 1843, Hamel travelled to Europe (London, Naples, Rome, Florence, Bologna, Venice, and then north to France and Belgium).[4] In 1846 he returned to Canada to Quebec. Throughout his career he travelled throughout Canada East and Canada West, painting portraits of such notables as Sir John Beverley Robinson, Denis-Benjamin Viger, Sir Allan MacNab, Louis-Joseph Papineau, John Sandfield Macdonald, and Sir Étienne Taché. He worked quickly, often completing a portrait in a single day.[5]

Hamel also painted religious pictures for various commissions, and a series of "imaginative" or "semi-imaginative" portraits of Jacques Cartier, Samuel de Champlain, Jean Talon, Montcalm, and General James Murray. The image of Cartier even appeared on a banknote.[6] It is estimated that Hamel painted more than 2000 portraits during his lifetime.[7] In 1848, he painted portraits of Robert Baldwin and Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine. In 1850-1, he painted Egerton Ryerson. In 1853, he painted 'Madame Renaud and Her Daughters Wilhemine and Emma'. His painting 'L'Abbé Edouard Faucher', painted in 1855, now hangs at Eglise de Saint-Laurent, Lotbiniere. His painting of Sir Allan MacNab, painted in 1853, hangs in the House of Commons of Canada.[8]

Family

In 1857, at age of 40, he married Mathilde-Georgiana Faribault, daughter of George-Barthélemy Faribault, a pioneer librarian. He died in Quebec City, in December 1870.[9]

Works

Title/subject Artist Date created Medium
Théophile Hamel1848Oil on canvas
Louis-Hippolyte LafontaineThéophile Hamel1848Oil on canvas
Egerton RyersonThéophile Hamel1850-1Oil on canvas
'Madame Renaud and Her Daughters Wilhemine and Emma'Théophile Hamel1853Oil on canvas
'L'Abbé Edouard Faucher'Théophile Hamel1855Oil on canvas
Jean-Antoine PanetCopy by Théophile Hamel1856Oil on canvas
David William SmithThéophile Hamel1859Oil on canvas
Alexander MacdonellCopy by Théophile Hamel1854Oil on canvas
Levius Peters SherwoodCopy by Théophile Hamel1855Oil on canvas
John WillsonThéophile Hamel1855Oil on canvas
Marshall Spring BidwellThéophile Hamel1854Oil on canvas
Archibald McLeanThéophile Hamel1854Oil on canvas
Sir Allan Napier MacNabThéophile Hamel1853Oil on canvas
Henry RuttanThéophile Hamel1856Oil on canvas
Austin CuvillierCopy by Théophile Hamel1856Oil on canvas
Augustin-Norbert MorinThéophile Hamel1854Oil on canvas
John Sandfield MacdonaldThéophile Hamel1854Oil on canvas
Louis-Victor SicotteThéophile Hamel1855Oil on canvas
Sir Allan MacNabThéophile Hamel1862Oil on canvas
Joseph-Édouard TurcotteThéophile Hamel1865Oil on canvas
Major General James WolfeCopy by Théophile HamelOil on canvas
Louis-Joseph de MontcalmCopy by Théophile HamelOil on canvas
George PrevostCopy by Théophile Hamel after Robert Field 1864Oil on canvas

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Raymond . Vézina . Hamel, Théophile . . 1976.
  2. Hubbard, p. 34.
  3. R. H. Hubbard, Antoine Plamondon / 1802-1895, Théophile Hamel / 1817-170. Two Painters of Quebec / Deux Peintres de Québec (Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada, 1970), pp. 14-34-35.
  4. Book: Pound, Richard W. . 'Fitzhenry and Whiteside Book of Canadian Facts and Dates' . Fitzhenry and Whiteside . 2005.
  5. Hubbard, p. 37.
  6. Hubbard, p. 38.
  7. Gérard Morisset, La peinture traditionnelle au Canada français (Ottawa, 1960), p. 118.
  8. Book: Pound, Richard W. . 'Fitzhenry and Whiteside Book of Canadian Facts and Dates' . Fitzhenry and Whiteside . 2005.
  9. Hubbard, p. 61.