Jean-Antoine Constantin, (January 1756 in Marseille - 9 January 1844 in Aix-en-Provence), was a French painter.
Contents |
Born in the vicinity of the Loubière, in Marseille, Jean-Antoine Constantin studied at the Academy of Painting in Marseille under the tutelage of Jean-Joseph Kappeler, David de Marseille, and Jean-Baptiste Giry[1]. Although born and bred in Marseille, he spent his whole professional life as a painter in Aix-en-Provence[1].
In the aftermath of his graduation, he started work in the pottery industry in Moustiers-Sainte-Marie[1]. He then lived in Rome for six years[2] under the patronage of Perron, an arts enthusiast from Aix. Later, he moved back to Aix to work as a painter there. He mostly did landscape painting, with Digne-les-Bains, Fontaine-de-Vaucluse, or Marseille as inspirations[1].
In 1786, he became the third principal of the drawing school in Aix, up until the French Revolution. In 1807, he moved to Digne to work as a drawing teacher for six years[1]. He returned to Aix in 1813, with the financial support of François Marius Granet[2], who gave him an allowance of 150 francs[1]. In January 1844, at age 88, he died a poor man.
Jean-Antoine Constantin is seen as one of the forefathers of Provencal painting[3]. François Marius Granet, Auguste de Forbin, Louis Mathurin Clérian, Émile Loubon are some of the later painters to have sought inspiration from his paintings[1].
[This article has been translated from the French Wikipedia.]
|