Skip to main content

Jean Francois Raffaelli

We do not currently have any artworks by Jean Francois Raffaelli listed on our website, but we may have items available at our two galleries located on New Bond Street.

Please contact us to discuss further:

Telephone +44 (0)20 7493 3939
Email: paintings@richardgreen.com

Jean Francois Raffaelli Biography

JEAN-FRANÇOIS RAFFAËLLI

1850 - Paris - 1924

 

 

Jean-François Raffaëlli was born in Paris into a bourgeois family of Italian descent. He enjoyed a privileged childhood until the age of fourteen, when the failure of his father’s textile business forced him to seek employment. He held a series of jobs before being placed, unwillingly, in a house of commerce as a book-keeper at the age of sixteen. While working there, he began to visit the Louvre and to spend his Sundays in the Musée du Luxembourg. His initial artistic interest was in drawing, and as he developed this passion, he gave up his job and supported himself by singing in theatres and churches.

 

Although he had received no formal training, one of Raffaëlli’s landscapes was accepted by the Salon Jury in 1870, and the following year he enrolled at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, where he studied in the studio of Gérôme for three months. For the first period of his artistic development, Raffaëlli turned to Corot, Roybet and Fortuny, painting mainly landscapes and historical costume pieces. Suddenly and without apparent warning he produced a powerful portrait of a Breton peasant family in 1876, La famille de Jean le Boîteux (Mairie de la Quesnoy, Dépot du Musée d’Orsay). This was exhibited at the 1877 Salon and heralded a new phase in the artist’s career.

 

Raffaëlli was one of the young artists who gathered around Degas at the Café de la Nouvelle-Athènes and through the older painter's influence he was invited to exhibit with the Impressionists in 1880 and 1881. During the late 1870s and the 1880s, he painted many aspects of the rapidly expanding suburbs of Paris, frequently portraying the types of people, such as rag-pickers and garlic-sellers, who were being made redundant by the onset of urbanisation. In the 1880s, Raffaëlli ws living in Asnières on the Seine to the north-west of the city, a popular bourgeois leisure spot, but just across the river from Clichy and Levallois, haunt of the urban poor. In 1892 he moved back into the centre of Paris and began to concentrate largely on views of the capital, Parisian monuments, boulevards, and later, views of the countryside and seaports.

 

An independent exhibition of Raffaëlli’s work was held in 1884 and five years later he was awarded the Légion d’Honneur. He visited New York in 1895 and 1897 and died in Paris in 1924.

 

The work of Jean-François Raffaëlli is represented in the Louvre, Paris; the Musée d’Orsay, Paris; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Art Institute of Chicago; the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Buenos Aires.

 

Cookie Policy

We use cookies to remember your favourite art work, settings, personalise content, improve website performance, analyse traffic and assist with our general marketing efforts. Learn more