François-Auguste Ravier

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François-Auguste Ravier; portrait by Louis Janmot
View of Crémieu

François-Auguste Ravier (4 May 1814 – 26 June 1895) was a French landscape painter.

Biography

He was born in

Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot, who had a great influence on his early style.[1]

From 1840 to 1845, at the urging of Corot, he worked in Italy, where he mingled with the French art community. Although he spent most of his time wandering through the countryside painting, he apparently never exhibited his works there. After returning to France, he settled in Crémieu until 1868, when he moved to Morestel, attracted by the lighting and impressive, isolated landscapes.

Many young painters were interested in his experimental techniques, and went there to seek his advice. Much later, these artists were grouped together and called the "École de Morestel". François Guiguet, whom he met in 1876 is, perhaps, the best remembered among this group.

In his final decade, Ravier suffered from a progressive blindness. It was said that he had "looked at the sun too much".[citation needed] He died in Morestel in 1895.

In addition to Corot, Ravier was a great admirer of the English painter, J. M. W. Turner. Due to his innovative methods of mixing colors, he is sometimes considered to be an early Impressionist.

References

  1. ^ Extract from the Bénézit Dictionary

Further reading

  • Maurice Wantellet, Deux siècles et plus de peinture dauphinoise, self-published, 1987
  • Christine Boyer-Thiollier, Nathalie Servonnat-Favier, François Auguste Ravier 1814-1895, catalog, preface by Jean Guitton, for the inauguration of the Maison Ravier in Morestel
  • Christine Boyer-Thiollier, De la Photographie-tableau, carnet épistolaire illustré ; lettres de F.A. Ravier à F. Thiollier (1873-1895) ; éditions MCCBT, Paris, 2013
  • Galerie Jonas (Paris), F. A. Ravier : 1814-1895, Exhibition catalog, 1975

External links