Jules-Élie Delaunay
See also: Delaunay
Jules-Élie Delaunay (June 13rd 1828 with Nantes - September 5th 1891 with Paris) is a neo-classic painter French, known especially for its murals and its portraits.
He enters in 1848 to the École of the Art schools of Paris, where he is the pupil of Hippolyte Flandrin and Louis Lamothe. Second with the Price of Rome in 1856, it remains four years with the Villa Médicis. He is elected member of the Académie of the Art schools in 1879 and becomes foreman at the School of the Art schools in 1889.
Jules-Élie Delaunay had as pupils Henri Dabadie, Marcel Paul Meys, Georges Rouault, Jose Maria Veloso Salgado.
Murals
Religious buildings
- Convent of the Visitation with Nantes
- Saint-François-Xavier Church of Paris
- Church of the Holy Trinity of Paris
Parisian civil buildings
- the Pantheon: holy Genevieve returns the calm one to Parisian to the approach of Attila .
- Palais Royal
- Opera Garnier
- Court of appeal
- Council of State
External bonds
- Jules-Élie Delaunay on Artcyclopedia
- paintings of Jules-Élie Delaunay to the Opera Garnier
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