François Barthélemy Michel Édouard Cibot (1799–1877) was a French historical and landscape painter born in Paris. His masters were Guérin and Picot. During the first part of his career he devoted himself to historical painting, producing many sacred works, several specimens of which are to be seen in the churches of Paris. His most important work of this kind is the series of paintings representing Charity, in the church of St. Leu at Paris. About 1863 he applied himself to landscape painting. He died in Paris in 1877. Amongst his best works are:
- The Loves of the Angels. 1835.
- Regina Coeli. 1846.
- St. Theresa. 1847.
- Convicts in 1788. 1836.
- Chestnut-trees at Aulnay. 1855.
- Park at Orsay. 1857.
- The Gouffre, near Seineport. 1864. (In the Luxembourg Gallery.)
- View at Soisy-sur-Ecolle. 1865.
Gallery
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Le Pérugin and Raphaël in Pérouse (1842)
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The Death of the Duke of Berry (1820)
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Defense of Celesyria by Raymond du Puy (1844)
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A Feature of Frédégonde's Life (1832)
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The Compromise of Nobles in 1566 (1849)
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bryan, Michael (1886). "Cibot, Francois Barthélemy Michel Edouard". In Graves, Robert Edmund (ed.). Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (A–K). Vol. I (3rd ed.). London: George Bell & Sons.
External links
- Media related to Édouard Cibot at Wikimedia Commons