Jean-Paul Sinibaldi

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Daughter of a rajah
The memory of Fanche-a story
The emperor's proclamation

Jean-Paul Sinibaldi (born May 19, 1857 in Paris , † January 1909 in Bourg-en-Bresse , Département Ain ), better known as Paul Sinibaldi, was a French painter. His predominant genres were portraits and country life.

Life

Sinibaldi was a student of Alexandre Cabanel and Alfred Stevens at the École des Beaux-Arts (EBA) . With the support of his teachers, Sinibaldi was able to participate in the major annual exhibitions of the Salon de Paris from 1881 . In 1886 he was honored with the Prix ​​de Rome and in 1888 he received a travel grant, awarded by the Conseil supérieur des beaux-arts . At the world exhibition in Paris in 1889 , he received a bronze medal.

In 1893 there was a scandal at the Alsatian Art Association in Mulhouse . A German activist cut the head out of a picture of a young woman.

At the World Exhibition in Paris in 1900 he won a silver medal. In the same year he was made a Knight of the Legion of Honor .

If most of the clients were private individuals, Sinibaldi also received public contracts. For example, he designed a hall in the town hall of Paris and the wedding hall in the town hall of Lille . Furthermore, in 1897 he received an order from the Ministry of Economic Affairs to design a representative office.

Works (selection)

Oil paintings

  • Le défilé . 1881 (an interpretation of the work of the same name by François Coppée ).
  • Fille of the Rajas . 1888.
  • Claude, nomé Empereur . 1890.
  • Sarah Bernhardt (1895).
  • Femme au terre-plein du Pont-Neuf , (1892)
  • Jeune fille assise
  • Reverie aux Tuileries

Ceiling painting

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Journal officiel de la République française digitized
  2. ^ La Justice digitized
  3. Le XIXe siècle: journal quotidien politique et littéraire digitized
  4. ^ Le Gauloise: littéraire et politique digitalisat