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Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres

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Ingres, Jean Auguste Dominique 

Born Aug. 29, 1780, in Montauban; died Jan. 14, 1867, in Paris. French painter, graphic artist, and musician.

Ingres was a pupil of J. L. David. He also studied the violin. In his youth, Ingres served in the episcopal chapel in Montauban and performed as a soloist in the orchestra of the municipal theater in Toulouse. From 1806 to 1824 he lived and worked in Italy, studying the art of the Renaissance, especially the paintings of Raphael in Rome. He was director of the French Academy in Rome from 1834 to 1841.

Ingres painted scenes on literary, historical, and religious subjects, for example, Jupiter and Thetis (1811, Musée Granet, Aix-en-Provence), The Vow of Louis XIII (1824, Montauban Cathedral), Oedipus and the Sphinx (1827, Louvre), The Apotheosis of Homer (1827, Louvre), and The Turkish Bath (1862–63, Louvre). His detailed, penetrating portraits include Madame Devau-cay (1807, Musée Conde, Chantilly), three portraits of members of the Riviere family (1805, Louvre), L. Benin (1832, Louvre), and Madame Moitessier (1851, National Gallery, Washington, D.C.). Valpincon Bather (1818, Louvre) and La Grande Odalisque (1814, Louvre) are among his well-known nudes. He also executed portraits of N. Paganini, C. Gounod, F. Liszt, and other music figures.

Many of Ingres’s works, especially his early paintings, reveal a subtle palette of harmoniously clear, light shades. However, his style is noted mainly for its precise, supple, and expressive linear composition. Ingres produced numerous brilliant pencil portraits, most of which are housed at the Ingres Museum in Montauban. The classical tendencies in his works had a considerable influence on the development of academicism in French art. Ingres also studied problems of music education and voice training.

WORKS

Ecritssurl’art. Paris, 1947.

REFERENCES

Engrob iskusstve. Compiled by A. N. Izergina. Moscow, 1962.
Berezina, V. Zhan-Ogiust-Dominik Engr. Moscow, 1977.
Delaborde, A. Ingres, sa vie, ses travaux, sa doctrine. Paris, 1870.
Pach, W. Ingres. New York, 1973.


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Paraphrasing a thought expressed by the 19th-century French painter Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, she continued, "The more simple the lines and forms, the greater the beauty and power.
The Italian researcher has collaborated with British artist David Hockney, who wrote in his 2001 book "Secret Knowledge" that Caravaggio and later the Flemish Baroque artist Anthony Van Dyck (1599-1641) and French neoclassical painter Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (1780-1867) used optical instruments to compose their paintings.
Between 1780-97, Jean-Germain Drouais, Francois-Xavier Fabre, Francois Gerard, Antoine-Jean Gros, Jean-Baptiste Joseph Wicar, Jean-Baptiste Isabey, Francois Topino-Lebrun, Philippe Auguste Hennequin, and Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres all were admitted to it.
 
 
 
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