Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres |
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (August 29, 1780 - January 14, 1867) was a French painter.
Born in Montauban, Tarn-et-Garonne, France, he had his academic training in the
Toulouse Academy then went to Paris in 1796 to
study under Jacques-Louis David. He soon left the studio
involving a difference of opinion on style. Ingres's style was more flat and linear, and focused on contour.
He won the Prix de Rome in 1801
and his masterpiece, the Grande Odalisque, a harem girl
with too many vertebrae, hangs in the Louvre. The textures in the painting are painted
intricately. One can get a sense of the texture of the fabric and the smooth skin of the girl. The elongated features are
reminiscent of old Mannerist painters. Ingres was searching for the pure form of
his models.
Ingres was interred in the Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, France.
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