Artist: Désiré François Laugée (French, 1823 – 1896)
Medium: Antique etching on wove paper after the original by master etcher Charles Courtry (19th Century).
Signature: Signed in the plate lower right
Dimensions: Image Size 7 3/8 x 9 7/8 inches..
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 16 x 19 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
Laugée has made the most of his material, not confining himself to the open gestures of youth, but using the strong but closer action of wiry old age as an artistic antithesis. Nature is fond of such degrees. Part of the horror of a branch of artificial lilies is the insistent youth of the several flowers; a bud is allowed to finish the stem, but all the opened blossoms must be in blooming perfection. Nature’s branch of lilies, on the other hand, has no two alike, from the wrinkled petals below to the vigorous fullness and the opening forms and the close bud that follow above them. So does a wise artist. The old woman in Laugée’s work has still sinewy hands, but there is some effort in their hold, and her figure bends rather than braces itself to toil. Flowers and spring grass are under the women’s feet.
Désiré François Laugée was a French painter. His work included portraits and classical religious or historical scenes. His large murals still decorate several churches in Paris. He also made naturalist landscapes and genre paintings of peasants, particularly in his later life. With this work he may be seen as a precursor of the Barbizon school. He achieved great success during his lifetime, although his work has since been largely ignored. Désiré-François Laugée was born in Maromme, a village near to Rouen, on 25 January 1823. His parents were Georges François Toussaint Laugée, a clerk, and Eulalie Léger. In 1825 the family moved to Saint-Quentin, Aisne. He attended the Collège des Bons-Enfants, where he showed a talent for drawing at an early age. Laugée enrolled in the Ecole des Beaux-Arts of Saint-Quentin, founded by the pastel artist Maurice Quentin de La Tour. He worked in the studio of Louis Nicolas Lemasle, a pupil of Jacques-Louis David. Laugée’s father wanted him to become a mechanic, but his teacher insisted that would waste a great talent. Eventually his father relented and let Laugée go to the École des Beaux-Arts’ in Paris. There he joined the studio of François-Édouard Picot, also a pupil of Jacques Louis David. His family ran into financial difficulty and he considered leaving the school, but Picot gave him the support needed to complete his studies. He submitted his first work to the Salon in 1845. It was a portrait of a father and son, M.G.L. and M.D.L., which some writers have taken to represent his father and himself. On 14 May 1850 Laugée married Célestine Marie Malézieux (1825–1909). They would have five children. After his marriage he moved to Nauroy, ten kilometers from Saint-Quentin, where his wife’s family lived. When he became famous he was called the “Master of Nauroy”. Sainte-Clotilde secourant les pauvres Sainte-Clotilde, Paris Laugée won commissions for portraits, and regularly submitted portraits to the Salon until 1859. At the same time, he worked on a variety of subjects including historical and religious paintings. As his artistic career evolved, Laugée became increasingly interested in landscapes and peasant genre subjects. However, most of the works he submitted to the Salons were religious, and were often bought by the state. His Saint Louis Washing the Feet of the Poor for the salon of 1863 was an example. Other Salon entries were based on works that had been commissioned by churches, including murals. At the Salon Laugée won the 3rd class medal in 1851, 2nd class medal in 1855, rappel in 1859, 1st class medal in 1861 and rappel in 1863. Laugée’s historical and religious paintings became much sought after. Édouard Manet’s Incident in a Bullfight has been compared to Laugée’s incident in the Polish Wars of 1863, since lost. He was made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor in 1865. At the Société des Artistes Français he was made hors concours, meaning that his work did not have to be reviewed by a jury. Laugée was one of the artists commissioned to decorate the interior of the dome of the Bourse de commerce in 1888–89 with paintings that represented the four compass points and the five continents. He died in his studio home at 15 bis boulevard Lannes in the 16th arrondissement of Paris on 24 January 1896. He is buried in the family vault in the Passy cemetery. Laugée’s’s son, Georges Laugée, also became a painter. The Barbizon artist Julien Dupré spent time in rural Picardy in the 1870s as Laugée’s pupil, and in 1876 married Laugée’s daughter Marie Eléanore Françoise.