Louis Joseph Bahin

Louis Joseph Bahin (1813-1857) was a French-born American painter in the Antebellum South.

Louis Joseph Bahin
Natchez under the Hill by Louis Joseph Bahin, 1852, oil on canvas, Morris Museum of Art, Augusta, Georgia
BornOctober 6, 1813
DiedJune 27, 1857
Mississippi, U.S.
OccupationPainter
Spouse(s)Josephine Carementrand

Early life

Louis Joseph Bahin was born on October 6, 1813 in Armentières en Brie/Isles, Seine & Marne France.[1][2]

Career

Bahin exhibited his paintings in Marseille, Southern France, from 1832 to 1845.[2]

Bahin became a landscape painter and portraitist in the Antebellum South, especially in Natchez, Mississippi, and painted many members of the Southern aristocracy.[1] For example, he did a portrait of planter Levin R. Marshall and his son, George M. Marshall, which now hangs in the dining-room at Lansdowne, their family mansion.[3]

His work can also be found in public galleries and museums. For example, his painting, Natchez Under the Hill, is exhibited at the Morris Museum of Art in Augusta, Georgia.[4] Other paintings can be found at the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum in Williamsburg, Virginia, the Mississippi Department of Archives and History in Jackson, Mississippi, and the Western Reserve Historical Society in Cleveland, Ohio.[5]

Personal life and death

Bahin was married to Josephine Carementrand.[2] He died on June 27, 1857 in Mississippi.[1][2]

Paintings

  • Uyatt Crittenden Webb Family, Georgetown, Kentucky (circa 1835).[5]
  • Henry LeGrand Conner (1803-1848) (circa 1840s).[5]
  • Portrait of a Young Girl (circa 1840-50).[5]
  • Louis Joseph Bahin (1813-1857) (1847).[5]
  • Gustave Joseph Bahin (1841-1913) (circa 1848).[5]
  • Portrait of George M. Marshall, I (1848-1857).[5]
  • Young Lady in a French Kitchen (1852).[5]
  • Mrs Louis Joseph Bahin (1811-1861). (1852).[5]
  • Henry Clay (1852).[5]
  • Natchez Under the Hill (1852).[5]
  • Mary Savage Conner Blake (1827-1893) (circa 1852).[5]
  • Anna Frances Conner (1835-1852) (circa 1852).[5]
  • Joseph Dunbar Shields (1854).[5]
  • Young Man in the Bahin Family (1854).[5]
  • Mrs. Miles Harper (Samantha Ford) (1859).[5]
  • John Ford Harper (1859).[5]
  • Truman Holmes, Jr. (1864).[5]
gollark: Is it on MIR?
gollark: Link?
gollark: I don't think that's useful.
gollark: The solution is simple: abolish negative numbers.
gollark: As in, less than half of the time.

References

  1. Patti Carr Black, Art in Mississippi, 1720-1980, Oxford, Mississippi: University Press of Mississippi, 1998, p. 93
  2. Karel, David (1992). Dictionnaire des artistes de langue française en Amérique du Nord: peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs, graveurs, photographes, et orfèvres. Québec: Presses Université Laval. p. 33. ISBN 9782763772356. OCLC 761506027.
  3. Lansdowne Plantation
  4. "Morris Museum of Art: Southern Collection". Archived from the original on 2014-10-28. Retrieved 2014-10-15.
  5. Smithsonian Institution: Louis Joseph Bahin



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