This painting is in excellent condition
with no major alterations or repairs, and probably
has its original frame. It is highly decorative and
has many architectural points of interest, aside from
the young musician.
Louis Ducis
b. Versailles, 14 July 1775; d. Paris, 3 March 1847.
French painter.
Around 1795 he entered the studio
of Jacques-Louis David, where he was a member of
the group of artists from southern France known
as the 'parti aristocratique' (Pierre Révoil,
Fleury Richard, Comte Auguste de Forbin and François-Marius
Granet), who were among the first to paint small-scale
pictures of French history. Ducis remained a friend
of Granet throughout his life (e.g. Portrait of
Mme Granet , Aix-en-Provence, Mus. Granet). He exhibited
regularly in the Salon between 1804 and 1838, winning
a medal for history painting in 1808. He rapidly
acquired a considerable reputation with scenes of
sentimental mythology such as Orpheus and Eurydice
(exh. Salon 1808; untraced), in part due to his
links with the poet Jean-François Ducis (his
uncle) and with his brother-in-law, the actor François
Joseph Talma. (He exhibited Talma's Débuts
(Paris, Mus. Comédie-Française) at
the Salon of 1831.) Josephine and her daughter Hortense
were among his patrons; at Malmaison the Empress
owned four portraits by Ducis of children, probably
the two youngest sons of Hortense and the elder
daughters of her son, Eugène Beauharnais
(untraced). For Napoleon Ducis executed a stiff
composition, halfway between a group portrait and
a history painting, Napoleon and his Family at Saint-Cloud
(exh. Salon 1810; Versailles, Château). In
1811 he stayed in Naples, where he painted portraits
of the royal family.
Frame Dimensions:
31 1/2 in. x 36 1/2 in