Louis-Marie Baader
Louis-Marie Baader (20 June 1828, Lannion - 2 December 1920, Morlaix) was a French painter of German descent.
Life[]
The son of a German musician (serving in comte Jacques Boudin de Tromelin's regiment) and his Norman wife, the count saw Louis-Marie's artistic potential early and with his support he entered the École des beaux-arts in Paris in 1848, in Adolphe Yvon's studio. Initially he gained several church and private commissions, but he only exhibited at the Paris Salon from 1857 to 1914. In 1866 he won a medal for Hero and Leander and a third class medal in 1874 for Posthumous Glory, allowing him to sell several paintings to the French state. He worked for a long time as a history painter, but later moved into genre work, especially on Breton life, before ending his career painting military history paintings. He died unmarried and is buried in the cimetière Saint-Charles in Morlaix.
Sources[]
- Durox Cyrielle and Riou Béatrice, Au Salon ! Louis-Marie Baader (1828-1920), exhibition catalogue, Musée de Morlaix, juin 2013, 120p.
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This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (February 2017) |
- 1828 births
- 1920 deaths
- 19th-century French painters
- 20th-century French painters
- 20th-century male artists
- French people of German descent
- People from Lannion
- French painter, 19th-century birth stubs