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ALPHONSE LEGROS (1837– )

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 381 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALPHONSE LEGROS (1837– )  , painter and etcher, was born at
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Dijon on the 8th of May 1837 . His
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father was an accountant, and came from the neighbouring
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village of Veronnes . Young Legros frequently visited the farms of his relatives, and the peasants and landscapes of that
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part of France are the subjects of many of his pictures and etchings . He was sent to the
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art school at Dijon with a view to qualifying for a trade, and was apprenticed to Maitre Nicolardo, house decorator and painter of images . In 1851 Legros
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left for Paris to take another situation; but passing through Lyons he worked for six months as journeyman wall-painter under the decorator Beuchot, who was
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painting the
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chapel of Cardinal Bonald in the
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cathedral . In Paris he studied with Cambon, scene-painter and decorator of theatres, an experience which
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developed a breadth of touch such as Stanfield and Cox picked up in similar circumstances . At this time he attended the
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drawing-school of Lecoq de Boisbaudran . In 1855 Legros attended the evening classes of the Lcolle
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des Beaux Arts, and perhaps gained there his love of drawing from the antique, some of the results of which may be seen in the
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Print
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Room of the
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British Museum . He sent twoportraits to the
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Salon of 1857: one was rejected, and formed part of the
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exhibition of protest organized by Bonvin in his studio; the other, which was accepted, was a
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profile portrait of his father . This
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work was presented to the museum at
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Tours by the artist when his friend Cazin was curator . Champfleury saw the work in the Salon, and sought out the artist to enlist him in the small army of so-called " Realists," comprising (round the noisy glory of Courbet) all those who raised protest against the academical trifles of the degenerate Romantics . In 1859 Legros's "
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Angelus " was exhibited, the first of those quiet church interiors, with kneeling figures of patient
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women, by which he is best known as a painter .

" Ex Voto," a work of

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great power and insight, painted in 1861, now in the museum at Dijon, was received by his friends with
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enthusiasm, but it only obtained a mention at the Salon . Legros came to England in 1863, and in 1864 married
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Miss Frances Rosetta Hodgson . At first he lived by his etching and teaching . He then became teacher of etching at the South
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Kensington School of Art, and in 1876 Slade Professor at University College,
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London . He was naturalized as an Englishman in 1881, and remained at University College seventeen years . His influence there was exerted to encourage a certain distinction, severity and truth of character in the work of his pupils, with a
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simple technique and a respect for the traditions of the old masters, until then some-what
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foreign to
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English art . He would draw or paint a torso or a head before the students in an
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hour or even less, so that the attention of the pupils might not be dulled . As students had been known to take weeks and even months over a single drawing, Legros ordered the positions of the casts in the Antique School to be changed once every week . In the painting school he insisted upon a good outline, preserved by a thin rub in of
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umber, and then the work was to be finished in a single painting, " premier coup." Experiments in all varieties of art work were practised; whenever the professor saw a
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fine example in the museum, or when a
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process interested him in a workshop, he never rested until he had mastered the technique and his students were trying their 'prentice hands at it . As he had casually picked up the art of etching by watching a comrade in Paris working at a commercial
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engraving, so he began the making of medals after a walk in the British Museum, studying the masterpieces of Pisanello, and a visit to the
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Cabinet des Medailles in Paris . Legros. considered the traditional journey to Italy a very important part of
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artistic training, and in order that his students should have the benefit of such study he devoted a part of his
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salary to augment the income available for a travel-ling studentship . His later
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works, after he resigned his professorship in 1892, were more in the
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free and ardent manner of his early days—imaginative landscapes, castles in Spain, and farms in
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Burgundy, etchings like the series of " The Triumph of
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Death," and the sculptured fountains for the gardens of the duke of Portland at Welbeck .

Pictures and drawings by Legros, besides those already mentioned, may be seen in the following galleries and museums: " Amende Honorable," " Dead

Christ," bronzes, medals and twenty-two drawings, in the Luxembourg, Paris; "Landscape," " Study of a Head," and portraits of Browning, Burne-Jones, Cassel, Huxley and Marshall, at the Victoria and Albert Museum, Kensington; Femmes en priere,"
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National Gallery of British Art ; " The
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Tinker," and six other works from the Ionides Collection, bequeathed to South Kensington; " Christening," " Barricade," " The Poor at
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Meat," two portraits and several drawings and etchings, collection of Lord Carlisle; " Two Priests at the
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Organ," " Landscape " and etchings, collection of Rev . Stopford Brooke; " Head of a Priest," collection of Mr Vereker Hamilton; " The Weed-burner," some sculpture and a large collection of etchings and drawings, Mr Guy Knowles; " Psyche, ' collection of Mr L . W . Hodson; " Snow Scene," collection of Mr G . F . Watts, R.A.;
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thirty-five drawings and etchings, the Print Room, British Museum; " Jacob's Dream " and twelve drawings of the antique, Cambridge; " Saint Jerome," two studies of heads and some drawings, Manchester; " The Pilgrimage " and " Study made before the CIass," Liverpool Walker Art Gallery; " Study of Heads," Peel Park Museum,
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Salford . See Dr Hans W . Singer, " Alphonse Legros," Die graphischen Kiinste (1898); Leonce Benedite, " Alphonse Legros," Revue de Part (Paris, 1900) ; Cosmo Monkhouse, " Professor Legros,"
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Magazine of Art (1832) . (C .

End of Article: ALPHONSE LEGROS (1837– )
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