Camille Saglio

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Camille Marie Joseph Saglio (born September 4, 1804 in Strasbourg , Alsace , † September 23, 1889 in Paris ) was a French landscape painter and illustrator of the Düsseldorf School .

Life

View of Civita Castellana , Italy, 1842; Rolin Museum , Autun
Cervara di Roma (engraving based on a painted view by Camille Saglio)

Saglio was a descendant of the famous Alsatian family Saglio, who immigrated from Plesio in Lombardy and produced well-known entrepreneurs, politicians and scientists in the 18th and 19th centuries. His father was the entrepreneur François Joseph Jean Saglio (1765–1813), his mother Marie Suzanne van Recum (1774–1844) from Grünstadt , the sister of Johann Nepomuk and Andreas van Recum . Camille Saglio was the sixth of nine children, he had two sisters and six brothers. Together with his brother Charles Joseph André Saglio (1799–1862) he ran the sugar refineries in Ingouville and Harfleur near Le Havre ( Normandy ). On February 12, 1822 he married his first cousin Joséphine Amélie Paravey in Paris, on January 18, 1834 his second marriage in Paris to her sister Thérèse Alexandrine Josèphine Paravey (1810-1884), who between 1834 and 1846 were three boys and two girls gave birth, among them the future engineer Camille Saglio (1844-1904) and the daughter Amélie Saglio (1838-1889), who in 1860 married the French painter Alfred de Curzon .

In 1835/1836 Saglio attended the landscape painting class of Johann Wilhelm Schirmer at the Düsseldorf Art Academy . In 1836 he introduced Schirmer, his teacher, to the rugged coastal landscape of Le Havre. In 1846 the Salon de Paris , in whose exhibitions he took part between 1839 and 1875, honored him with a "second medal".

Many of his landscape views served as models for engravings.

Works (selection)

literature

  • Alice Bauer, Janine Carpentier: Repertoire des artistes d'Alsace des dix-neuvième et vingtième siècle. Peintres, sculpteurs, engravers, dessinateurs . Volume 5 (S-U), Oberlin, Strasbourg 1988.

Web links

Commons : Camille Saglio  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Edouard Delobette: Ces Messieurs du Havre. Negociants, commissionnaires et armateurs de 1680 a 1830 . Dissertation Université de Caen, Caen 2005, p. 200, footnote 380 ( digitized version )
  2. ^ Genealogical website on Joséphine Amélie Paravey
  3. Camille Marie Joseph Saglio , genealogical data sheet in the portal gw.geneanet.org , accessed on May 7, 2016
  4. ^ French website about the son Camille Saglio (1844–1904)
  5. Amélie Saglio , genealogical data sheet in the portal gw.geneanet.org , accessed on May 7, 2016
  6. ^ Rudolf Theilmann : The list of students in the landscape class from Schirmer to Dücker . In: Wend von Kalnein (Ed.): The Düsseldorf School of Painting . Verlag Philipp von Zabern, Mainz 1979, ISBN 3-8053-0409-9 , p. 145
  7. Bettina Baumgärtel , Sabine Schroyen, Lydia Immerheiser, Sabine Teichgröb: Directory of foreign artists. Nationality, residence and studies in Düsseldorf . In: Bettina Baumgärtel (Hrsg.): The Düsseldorf School of Painting and its international impact 1819–1918 . Michael Imhof Verlag, Petersberg 2011, ISBN 978-3-86568-702-9 , Volume 1, p. 139
  8. Bernhard Poll (Ed.): Rheinische Lebensbilder . Volume 3, Society for Rhenish History, Rheinland-Verlag, Düsseldorf 1971, p. 199
  9. ^ Heinrich Appel: Sculpture and painting in the Rhineland . Verlag C. Hamel, Düren 1983, pp. 198, 217
  10. ^ Henri de Curzon: Alfred de Curzon, peintre (1820–1895). Sa vie e son œuvre d'après ses souvenirs, ses lettres, ses contemporains . Librairie Fischbacher, Paris 1914, p. 158 ( digitized 1 in the archive.org portal , digitized 2 in the archive.org portal )
  11. brigands in wild mountain landscape , the portal website artnet .com , accessed on May 7, 2016
  12. Vue de Civita Castellana , data sheet in the portal culture.gouv.fr , accessed on May 7, 2016