Adolphe Appian (1818-1898) The Banks Of The Ain, Signed Drawing flag

Adolphe Appian (1818-1898) The Banks Of The Ain, Signed Drawing
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Object description :

"Adolphe Appian (1818-1898) The Banks Of The Ain, Signed Drawing"
 Adolphe Appian (1818-1898)
Les Bords de l'Ain (Shores of Ain),
signed lower left
charcoal and white chalk on paper
36 x 45 cm
In quite good condition : foxings in the upper part (mainly on the upper left), and in the lower right part, trace of fold on the lower right, see photographs please
In its vintage frame : 51 x 60 cm

Adolphe Appian has painted and drawn the river Ain several times, making of these shores one of his preferd motive. He lived and worked in the village of Rossillon in the vicinity.

Adolphe Appian (born as Jacques Barthelemy Adolphe Appian on 23 August 1818 in Lyon, France, died on 29 April 1898 in Lyon) was a French landscape painter and etcher.
He changed his name to Adolphe Appian at age fifteen. At the same age Appian attended the Ecole des Beaux-Arts at Lyon which was an art school which specialized in training to decorate fabrics by a local silk industry. He studied under Jean-Michel Grobon and Augustin Alexandre Thierrat. Later he opened a studio in Lyon and worked as a graphic designer. He travelled to Paris to finish his studies and after he had exhibited a painting and a charcoal drawing in the Paris Salon
In 1852, Adolphe Appian met Camille Corot and Charles-François Daubigny who left a lasting mark on his work and his career. Until then, he was divided between music and painting; henceforth he mainly devoted himself to the second, adopting the style of the Barbizon school . He participated in the Universal Exhibition of 1862 in London. In 1866, Appian's two works that he exhibited in Paris were bought by Napoleon III and by princess Mathilde.
He painted at the beginning of his career atmospheric pictures in a monochromatic palette of the riverside of the Rhone and the south of France. In 1870 he changed his style to use brilliant and striking color in his paintings but he still continued to make charcoal drawings as well as small etchings of landscapes in the Barbizon style.
From 1863, he began to produce etchings, printed by Auguste Delâtre  : he had made two attempts in 1853-1854, and produced a total of ninety pieces
As an etcher, he had a distinct influence on the American artist, Stephen Parrish.
In 1885, he participated in the first international exhibition of white and black , section "Charcoals" and obtained the medal of honor in gold.
He won the gold medal at the 1868 Salon in Paris, and participated in the 1889 Paris Universal Exhibition .
Appian frequented the village of Rossillon , then appreciated by painters, and spent many summers in Artemare , in the Bas-Bugey , where he went down to the Hotel Buffet. He painted many sites in the Valromey . A friend of the painters of the Barbizon school, he made several stays in Fontainebleau . He is nicknamed the "  Charcoal Delacroix ".
Appointed Knight of the Legion of Honor inJuly 18926 , Adolphe Appian died in Lyon in 1898.

His works a re kept in many public collections :
In France
National Library of France
Municipal Museum of Bourg-en-Bresse
Castre Museum
Marseille , Cantini Museum
Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon
Nice Museum of Fine Arts
Cherbourg-Octeville , Thomas-Henry Museum
Mâcon , Musée des Ursuliness
Chambery Museum of Fine Arts  :
Tournus , Greuze Museum  
Paul-Dini Museum in Villefranche-sur-Saône 
Grenoble , Grenoble Museum
Rouen Museum of Fine Arts
Nantes Museum of Fine Arts
Le Puy-en-Velay , Crozatier Museum
Montpellier , Fabre Museum

In the USA
San Francisco , California Palace of the Legion of Honor
Cleveland Museum of Art
Dalhousie University Art Gallery ( Halifax , Nova Scotia )
Pomona College Museum of Art
Price: 630 €
Artist: Adolphe Appian (1818-1898)
Period: 19th century
Style: Napoleon 3rd
Condition: Good condition

Width: 45
Height: 36

Reference: 940684
Availability: In stock
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Old Masters paintings and drawings
Adolphe Appian (1818-1898) The Banks Of The Ain, Signed Drawing
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