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Guillaume Lethiere
Hardback

Guillaume Lethiere

$103.99
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A groundbreaking publication on the Caribbean-born French Neoclassical painter Guillaume Lethiere and his extraordinary, yet largely unexamined career

Born in the French colony of Guadeloupe, Guillaume Lethiere (1760-1832) was a key figure in the history of art during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The son of a formerly enslaved woman of color and a white government official and plantation owner, Lethiere moved to France with his father at age fourteen. He trained as an artist and successfully navigated the tumult of the French Revolution and its aftermath in order to achieve the highest levels of recognition in his time. A favorite artist of Napoleon's brother, Lucien Bonaparte, Lethiere also held important positions at the Academie de France in Rome, Institut de France, and Ecole des Beaux-Arts. A well-respected teacher, he operated a robust studio that rivaled those of his contemporaries Jacques-Louis David and Antoine-Jean Gros.

Despite his remarkable accomplishments and considerable corpus of paintings and drawings, Lethiere is relatively unknown today. Lavishly illustrated and authoritative, this groundbreaking study serves to introduce Lethiere to new and broader audiences and restore him to his rightful place as one of the most eminent artist of his generation. An international group of scholars offer the first comprehensive view of Lethiere's extraordinary career in its political, social, and art historical context, addressing issues of colonialism, slavery, and diaspora, as well as shedding new light on the presence and reception of Caribbean artists in France during this time.

Distributed for the Clark Art Institute

Exhibition Schedule:

Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA

(June 15-October 14, 2024)

Louvre, Paris

(November 14, 2024-February 17, 2025)

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Yale University Press
Country
United States
Date
5 September 2024
Pages
432
ISBN
9780300275780

A groundbreaking publication on the Caribbean-born French Neoclassical painter Guillaume Lethiere and his extraordinary, yet largely unexamined career

Born in the French colony of Guadeloupe, Guillaume Lethiere (1760-1832) was a key figure in the history of art during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The son of a formerly enslaved woman of color and a white government official and plantation owner, Lethiere moved to France with his father at age fourteen. He trained as an artist and successfully navigated the tumult of the French Revolution and its aftermath in order to achieve the highest levels of recognition in his time. A favorite artist of Napoleon's brother, Lucien Bonaparte, Lethiere also held important positions at the Academie de France in Rome, Institut de France, and Ecole des Beaux-Arts. A well-respected teacher, he operated a robust studio that rivaled those of his contemporaries Jacques-Louis David and Antoine-Jean Gros.

Despite his remarkable accomplishments and considerable corpus of paintings and drawings, Lethiere is relatively unknown today. Lavishly illustrated and authoritative, this groundbreaking study serves to introduce Lethiere to new and broader audiences and restore him to his rightful place as one of the most eminent artist of his generation. An international group of scholars offer the first comprehensive view of Lethiere's extraordinary career in its political, social, and art historical context, addressing issues of colonialism, slavery, and diaspora, as well as shedding new light on the presence and reception of Caribbean artists in France during this time.

Distributed for the Clark Art Institute

Exhibition Schedule:

Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA

(June 15-October 14, 2024)

Louvre, Paris

(November 14, 2024-February 17, 2025)

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Yale University Press
Country
United States
Date
5 September 2024
Pages
432
ISBN
9780300275780