Theodore Gericault BIOGRAPHY
Artist Biography
Biography page for Theodore Gericault ((1791 - 1824)), known for Portrait and historical genre painting. Showing 2 biographical entries and 0 sample artworks.
Theodore Gericault - Artist Info
About Theodore Gericault
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Biography from the Archives of askART
The following text was written and submitted by Jean Ershler Schatz, artist and researcher from Laguna Woods, California:
Theodore Gericault was born in Rouen on September 26,1791. From his youth, he showed a taste for drawing and for horses. He was educated at the Lycee Louis-le-Grand. He studied under Carle Vernet, in whose studio he met an elegant, witty and wordly group gathered around the master. Two years later, he left to study in the studio of Guerin; he was strongly influenced as well by the work of Rubens.
The Salon of 1812 exhibited a painting and his reputation was immediately established. In 1816 his visit to Italy left a profound effect on his work, particularly in separating him from the academic traditions of his early training. He returned to Paris in the fall of 1817 and lived in a house in Montmartre. He became friendly with Dr. Georget, who later commissioned an extraordinary series of portraits of insane people.
Gericault went to London in 1820, discouraged and exhausted, and stayed for two years, painting and doing several series of lithographs. He returned to Paris where his health gave way after much dissipation. At the same time he produced many sketches and some sculpture. He died in Paris on January 18, 1824 in great physical pain from injuries he had sustained two years before when he had fallen off his horse.
Sources include:
New York World's Fair 1940, Masterpieces of Art, Catalogue
Phaidon Encyclopedia of Art and Artists.Biography from Setdart
Théodore Géricault was recognized for his contribution to Romanticism and, in particular, for his works on military subjects and horses. One of his most outstanding works in this field is "Officer of Hunters in Charge". This work is one of his first major paintings and won him the gold medal at the Paris Salon of 1812. It depicts an officer of the Imperial Guard on horseback, on a charge, demonstrating his interest in depicting the action and energy of military life. Horses were another of Gericault's passions. He painted hundreds of equines and practiced horsemanship with the same impetus as painting. Gericault's most famous work is undoubtedly "The Raft of the Medusa", a painting now in the Louvre Museum in Paris.
