DOYEN, Gabriel-François - b. 1726 Paris, d. 1806 St Petersburg - WGA

DOYEN, Gabriel-François

(b. 1726 Paris, d. 1806 St Petersburg)

French painter. In 1748 he won second place in the Prix de Rome competition and subsequently became a pupil of Carle van Loo at the Ecole Royale des Eleves Protégés, Paris. In 1752 he arrived to complete his artistic education at the Académie de France in Rome, where he discovered the art of Raphael and of Domenichino, as well as that of such Baroque masters as Pietro da Cortona, Luca Giordano and Francesco Solimena. He also stayed in Parma and visited Venice, Bologna and Turin. His experiences in Italy confirmed him in his lifelong vocation for large-scale history painting.

He entered the Académie in 1758. Next year he exhibited at the Salon The Death of the Virgin and the painting was highly acclaimed. He visited Antwerp and in 1767 painted in Paris The Miracle of the Fervents, a robust hommage to Rubens.

He was summoned by Catherine II to Russia in 1791 and he participated in decorative works at her court. He became professor at St Petersburg Academy of Arts. He died in Russia in 1806.

The Miracle of The Fervent
The Miracle of The Fervent by

The Miracle of The Fervent

After a visit to Antwerp, Doyen was influenced by Peter Paul Rubens, as displayed in his Le Miracle des ardents (The Miracle of The Fervent), painted for the church of Saint-Roch in Paris. Doyen exhibited the painting in the Salon of 1767.

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