Aimée Duvivier (born 1766) was a French painter.
Duvivier was born either in Saint-Domingue[1] or in Paris.[2] Her father, Pierre-Charles Duvivier (1716–1780), was the director of the Savonnerie manufactory; her mother was Marie-Jeanne-Colombe Gromaire (died 1801). She was a pupil of Jean-Baptiste Greuze and exhibited at the Salon de la Jeunesse in 1786 and again in 1787. In 1791 she appeared at the Paris Salon, where her self-portrait attracted favorable notices. A few paintings have survived, but none of the work she is known to have produced in pastel is known to exist. Many details of Duvivier's biography remain obscure; even the year of her death is unclear, and has been given variously as 1824,[2] 1834,[3] and 1852.[1]
Gallery
- Self-portrait, 1790 (Accorsi-Ometto Museum)
- Armand Louis Le Boulanger, Marquis d’Acqueville, c. 1791-1796 (Blanton Museum of Art)
- Wounded Soldier, 1797 (Musée des Beaux-Arts de La Rochelle)
- Portrait of Gottfried Abraham de Heimbach, 1801 (Musée des Beaux-Arts de La Rochelle)
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aimée Duvivier.
- 1 2 Profile at the Dictionary of Pastellists Before 1800.
- 1 2 "figuration feminine : Aimée Duvivier (1760-1824)". Retrieved 17 August 2017.
- ↑ "Prices and estimates of works Aimee Duvivier". www.arcadja.com. Retrieved 17 August 2017.
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