(Redirected from Adelaide Labille-Guiard)
'Adélaïde Labille-Guiard' (
April 11,
1749 –
April 24,
1803) was a
French history and
portrait painter.
Born in
Paris, the daughter of a
haberdasher, she studied
miniature painting with
François-Elie Vincent and
oils with his son
François-André. Her early works were exhibited at the
Académie de Saint-Luc, and after it closed in
1776, at the
Salon de la Correspondance.
She married Louis-Nicolas Guiard in
1769, but separated from him in
1777. Thereafter, she earned a living by teaching painting.
On
May 31,
1783, Labille-Guiard was accepted as a member of the French ''
Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture''. Three other women, including
Marie Louise Élisabeth Vigée-Le Brun, were admitted as members on the same day, with some consternation on the part of some of the male members. The acceptance of the women together created a comparison among their works rather than to the works of the established members, easing the concerns of the old members.

''Self-portrait'', by Elisabeth Vigée-Le Brun, 1782,
Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas - a contemporary of Labille-Guiard to whom she often was compared.
The paintings of Labille-Guiard and Vigée-Le Brun were often compared by critics, with Vigée-Le Brun usually getting the more favorable notices. Labille-Guiard's early masterpiece ''Self-portrait with two pupils'', exhibited at the
Paris Salon in
1785, was influenced by Vigée-Le Brun's style. The artwork of Adélaïde Labille-Guiard now is being considered of more equal value.
Patronage by the aunt of
Louis XVI of France, the princess
Marie Adélaïde, gained Labille-Guiard a government
pension of 1,000
livres, and commissions to paint Adélaïde, her sister Victoire-Louise, and
Élisabeth, the king's sister. The portrait of Adélaïde, exhibited in
1787, was Labille-Guiard's largest and most ambitious work to that date. In
1788 she was commissioned by the king's brother, the
Count of Provence (later
Louis XVIII of France), to paint him at the centre of a large historical work, ''Réception d'un chevalier de Saint-Lazare par Monsieur, Grand maître de l'ordre''.
These royal connections made Labille-Guiard politically suspect after the
French Revolution of
1789. In
1793 she was ordered to destroy some of her royalist works, including the unfinished commission for the Count of Provence.
She was far from conservative, however, in the early 1790s she campaigned for the Academy to be opened up to the general admission of women. At the Salon of 1791 she exhibited portraits of members of the
National Assembly, including
Maximilien Robespierre and
Armand, duc d'Aiguillon.
In 1793 she and her first husband, from whom she separated in 1777, were divorced. In
1795 she obtained
artist's lodging at the
Louvre and a new pension of 2,000 livres. She continued to exhibit portraits at the Salon until 1800. In that same year she married her teacher,
François-André Vincent. She died on
April 24,
1803.
The
Getty Museum,
Harvard University Art Museums, the
Honolulu Academy of Arts,
Kimbell Art Museum (Fort Worth, Texas), the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the
Louvre, the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the
National Gallery of Art (Washington D.C.), the
National Museum in Warsaw, the
National Museum of Women in the Arts (Washington D.C.)], the
Speed Art Museum (Kentucky) and
Versailles are among the public collections holding works by Adélaïde Labille-Guiard.
External links
★
The art of Adélaïde Labille-Guiard
★
Biography of Adélaïde Labille-Guiard from the
Société Internationale pour l'Étude des Femmes de l'Ancien Régime