Pauline Auzou (24 March 1775 – 15 May 1835) was a French painter and art instructor, who exhibited at the Paris Salon and was commissioned to make paintings of Napoleon and his wife Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma.
Personal life
Jeanne-Marie-Catherine Desmarquets (sometime written Desmarquest) was born in Paris on 24 March 1775.[1][2][3] She assumed the surname La Chapelle when she was adopted by a cousin.[4] In December 1793 she married the stationer Charles-Marie Auzou.[5] Starting in 1794, they had at least two sons, two daughters and a child who did not survive infancy.[6]
Early in her studies and career, Auzou made paintings of legendary Greek figures.[1] She made studies of male and female nudes, something generally deemed inappropriate for women artists at the time.[11] Women artists found greater success in creating paintings of women in homey settings, making music or reading.[2]
The Paris Salon opened up the exhibition to women's works in 1791.[7] Her works were exhibited at the Paris Salon. In 1793,[2]A Bacchante and A study of a head.[16] She made a painting of legendary Daphnis and Phyllis, which was exhibited at the 1795 salon.[2] In 1804, The First Sense of Coquetry was exhibited there.[17] She was awarded a first class medal at the Salon in 1806 for her painting of Pickard Elder, which in 1807 was represented in the painting Mr. Pickard and his family.[18] In 1808, she was awarded the medaille de première classe for her work.[2] That year she exhibited Mr. Picard and his family at the Salon.[18]
At the 1810 Salon she displyed a painting of Napoleon and his bride entitled Archduchess Marie-Louise in Compiègne, depicting the newly married Napoleon who looks on fondly, and secondarily, as Marie-Louise is met by her ladys-in-waiting. Other paintings made of the couple by Auzou included a painting of Marie-Louise with her family, Her Majesty the Empress, before Her Marriage, at the Moment of Taking Leave of Her Family. Shown in 1806, Departure for the Duel depicts the family drama as a man looks at his sleeping wife and child before departing for a duel. Like other women artists of this time, Auzou depicted events as they impacted families. In this case, the wife was "condemned to seduction and the child to poverty," according to art critic Pierre-Jean-Baptiste Chaussard.[13] She exhibited at the Paris Salon until 1817[10] and generally until 1820.[18]
Auzou opened an art school for young women, like other women artists, Lizinka de Mirbel and Marie Guilhelmine Benoist, and men.[18][19] The studio and school were maintained for 20 years.[10] Her book Têtes d'études (English: Head studies) was published in Paris by Didot.[18]
Her painting Portrait of a musician is in the collection of the Currier Museum of Art, Manchester, New Hampshire, United States.[20] Two of her works of Empress Marie-Louise are in the collections of The National Museum of Versailles, Palace of Versailles,[18][21] including Her Majesty the Empress, before Her Marriage, at the Moment of Taking Leave of Her Family.[18][1][13] Her works were collected by the Society of Friends to the Arts, Duchess de Berri and the French government. Several of these works were engraved,[21] as well as period genre paintings such as the work engraved by John Norman, Diana of France and Montmorency.[2]
Despite overt exclusion of women artists from the institutions governing their profession, women artists nevertheless made progress, as a group and as individuals, in the years following the French Revolution.
— Louise Nochlin, Women Artists: 1550-1950 catalog[22]
^Margaret A. Oppenheimer; Smith College. Museum of Art. The French portrait: Revolution to Restoration : [exhibition] September 30-December 11, 2005, Smith College Museum of Art. Smith College Museum of Art; 2005. p. 35.
^ abcd"Pauline Auzou". The Epic and the Intimate: French Drawings from the John D. Reilly Collection.] Snite Museum of Art. University of Notre Dame. Retrieved 8 March 2014.