Isidore Laurent Deroy

French painter and lithographer (1797-1886)

Isidore Laurent Deroy, named also Isidore-Laurent Deroy, Isidore Deroy, Laurent Deroy (14 April 1797 – 25 November 1886) was an french painter from France.

Isidore Laurent Deroy
BornApril 14, 1797
Paris, France
DiedNovember 25, 1886
Paris, France
NationalityItalian
Education
Known forlandscapes, seascapes

Life change

He was a pupil of Félix Vallotton and Louis François Cassas, by whom he was deeply influenced, specializing as a painter, watercolorist and lithographer.

Together with André Chapuy and Louis Le Breton he was the author of numerous series of views of the places they considered the most beautiful in the world.

 
Le Pont suspendu de Rouen (av. 1865), lithograph, Pont-Audemer, musée Alfred-Canel.

Son of Jacques Deroy and Aimée Madeleine Pertuisot, Isidore Laurent Deroy was a pupil of the architect Félix and the painter Louis-François Cassas. He made a lot of descriptions and he is the author of a considerable body of work. We owe him French landscapes and animals, drawn, for the most part, in sepia.

Some of his work was featured in the galleries of the Duchess of Berry and Duke of Orléans. Deroy, who signed his paintings, exhibited at the Salons of 1810, 1812, 1819, 1822 and 1827.He obtained a 3rd class medal at the Salon du Louvre in 1836[1] as a lithographer.

He created in 1860 with the Becquet brothers the series France in Miniature.

A tireless lithographer, he reproduced various subjects for the "Amateur's Museum", and published countless views. He went to paint on Lake Como in Lierna, thanks to the friendship of a noble family who had possessions there by the lake.

His sons Émile and Auguste Victor are his pupils.

He died on November 25, 1886[2] at his Parisian home at 12, rue du Pré-aux-Clercs, widower of his wife Héloise Villain.

Gallery change

Related pages change

Footnotes change

  1. médaille 1836 sur Gallica.
  2. Acte de décès Archived 2015-12-27 at the Wayback Machine, état civil de Paris, p. 14/31.

Bibliography change

  • Henri Béraldi, Les Graveurs du xixe siècle : guide de l'amateur d'estampes modernes, vol. 5, Paris, L. Conquet, 1886, 242 p., p. 186-7.
  • David Karel, Dictionnaire des artistes de langue française en Amérique du Nord, Laval (Canada), Musée du Québec, Les Presses de l'Université.
  • Paul Marmottan, L’École française de peinture (1789-1839), Paris, H. Laurens, 1886, 471 p., p. 121-2.
  • Dictionnaire Bénézit, 1976.

Other websites change