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Revision as of 23:21, 26 August 2015
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (August 2015) |
Simplício Rodrigues de Sá (1785, São Nicolau Tolentino, Cape Verde, — 1839, Rio de Janeiro) was a Portuguese-born painter and art professor who spent much of his career in Brazil.
Biography
He studied in Lisbon and emigrated to Brazil in 1809. Seven years later, he became a follower of Jean Baptiste Debret, joining his group, the French Artistic Mission and helping to lay the foundations for what would become the Academia Imperial de Belas Artes in 1826.[1]
He was also named a court painter and a private art tutor to Princess Maria da Glória, the future Queen of Portugal. For his services, Emperor Pedro I awarded him the Order of Christ in 1826, and named him a Knight in the Order of the Southern Cross.[1]
In 1831, when Debret returned to Paris, Rodrigues took his place as head of the History Painting Department at the Imperial Academy. He eventually became a tenured professor there with an annual salary of 300,000 Reis.
In 1833, he became drawing master for the child-Emperor Pedro II and his sisters. After the death of Henrique José da Silva in 1834, he took over the Department of Design at the Academy. He also organized the first two major public exhibitions held there, in 1829 and 1830, although his first solo exhibition appears to have been given posthumously.[1]
He worked in several genres, including religious works for the Church of the "Ordem Terceira de São Francisco da Penitência", but is largely remembered as a portrait painter who focused on members of the Royal Family. He was apparently blind at the time of his death.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d Brief biographies @ the Enciclopédia Itaú Cultural.
External links
Media related to Simplício Rodrigues de Sá at Wikimedia Commons