Théophile Deyrolle

Théophile-Louis Deyrolle (16 December 1844, Paris - 14 December 1923, Concarneau) was a French painter, illustrator and ceramicist.

Young Breton Woman with Apples (date unknown)
Drawing of a Laz in traditional costume, published in 1875.

Biography

He came from a family of entomologists and naturalists who owned a well-known taxidermy shop in Paris. Achille and Émile Deyrolle were among his relatives. Originally, he studied architecture at the École des Beaux-arts. While working for Joseph Auguste Émile Vaudremer, he met Alfred Guillou who convinced him to give up architecture for painting. He then became a student and assistant in the studios of Alexandre Cabanel and William Bouguereau.[1]

In 1863, due perhaps to his family's reputation, he was able to travel to Armenia and Georgia on a commission from the Société de Géographie.[2] In addition to touring the monuments, he visited the Laz, gaining their trust and producing drawings and descriptions that were published in Le Tour du Monde - Nouveau Journal Des Voyages over the course of several years beginning in 1869. Some of his artist friends at Concarneau also published their versions of his drawings.

In 1871, he and Guillou left for Concarneau, Alfred's hometown, with nothing more than they could carry. The next year, he married Alfred's sister Suzanne, becoming a Breton by adoption.[3] Suzanne Guillous was also an artist.[4] Together, they founded the artists' colony there.

Once he became settled there. he began work for HB de Quimper, decorating plates and vases with Japanese motifs. He was also attracted to the life of the port and the maritime trades and became a part-time fishmonger.[1] Most of his paintings deal with the life of the harbor. Many inns and hotels in the area are decorated with his landscapes and pastoral scenes.

gollark: Also, even if we can't encrypt packets, we *can* sign them for authenticity.
gollark: APIONET would run over GEORGEnet for this.
gollark: It could likely be run off SDRs or something, at great cost, or just be tunable in a few bands.
gollark: I suppose frequency-hopping GEORGEnet could probably be done.
gollark: For example, no encryption, no music and stuff too, I think the US limits you to 9600 baud (!!!) on some bands, and also you probably can't run tons of traffic over it or someone will be annoyed.

References

Further reading

  • Yvon Le Floch, Catalogue de la fête des Filets bleus (Catalog of the Festival of the Blue Nets, a Breton folk festival that includes art displays), 1992
  • Ouest-France, for 16 September 2012.
  • Ana Cheishvili, "The Journey of Théophile Deyrolle in Tao-Klarjeti". Institute of Georgian History Proceedings VII: Pgs.267-274. (2013)

See also

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