Espérance Langlois

Espérance Langlois

Self-portrait (detail)
Born 19 October 1805
Pont de l'Arche
Died 4 December 1864(1864-12-04) (aged 59)
Sèvres
Nationality French
Occupation Painter and printmaker
Known for Faust et Marguerite. Salon of 1839[1]

Louise Marguerite Espérance Langlois (19 October 1805 4 December 1864) was a French painter and printmaker. From her marriage to the lawyer and businessman Jean-Adrien Bourlet de la Vallée she was also known as Espérance Bourlet de la Vallée.

Life

Door of the old church of Bonsecours

Espérance Langlois was born on 19 October 1805 at Pont-de-l'Arche in Normandy.[1] Her grandfather had been an adviser to the king of France. Her father was the artist and antiquarian Eustache-Hyacinthe Langlois. Throughout her childhood the family lived in great poverty, first in Pont-de-l'Arche and after 1816 in Rouen, while her father struggled to live by selling his work. These included drawings of old architecture and gothic-style illustrations of legends.[2] Both Espérance and her brother Polyclès Langlois were taught by their father and often assisted him with drawings and engravings.[3]

Espérance Langlois married Jean-Adrien Bourlet de la Vallée. Their son Alexandre Bourlet de la Vallée was a classmate of Gustave Flaubert.[4] In 1834 the Rouen Academy of Fine Arts awarded her a silver medal in the category "Genre works".[5] Espérance was later employed for several years as a painter by the Sèvres porcelain factory. The porcelain work she made there was shown at many exhibitions of industrial art in France and England.[6] She died on 4 December 1864 at Sèvres.[1]

Work

Espérance Langlois published seven engraved plates in an 1832 book written by her father about ancient and modern paintings on glass.[7] A book reviewer said of these engravings, "The beautiful and curious windows of the churches of St. Godard, the Cathedral, St. Ouen, St. Patrice, and St. Vincent in Rouen have been copied by Madamoiselle Langlois with great spirit, skill and faithfulness."[8] Another praised the beauty and exactitude of the drawings.[9] Three plates drawn and engraved by Esperance appeared in an 1833 Histoire du Privilege de Saint-Romain.[10]

Her illustrations in her father's book Stalles de la cathédrale de Rouen, published in 1838, are the main source for the appearance of the choir stalls and misericords that were destroyed when Rouen Cathedral was bombed during World War II.[11] Some of her engravings appeared in another book by her father on the dance of the dead, published in 1852.[12][13] Other works that have been attributed to her include engravings of historical, archaeological and religious topics and oil paintings of scenery and portraits.

Selected works

References

  1. Eugène Langlois (born 1824) was the son of a porter in Paris who was employed as a porcelain painter in his youth. Later he became a civil servant. He is best known as a poet and songwriter.[14]

Sources

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