François Jacques Fleischbein (1804–1868) was a German painter who lived and worked in New Orleans.
Biography
editFleischbein was born in Godramstein, Palatinate, nowadays Germany, in 1804. He studied painting in Paris with Anne-Louis Girodet. In 1833, he and his wife, Marie Louis Tetu, immigrated to cosmopolitan New Orleans, thus joining the community of international painters seeking fame in Louisiana.[1] Although born Franz Joseph, Fleischbein decided to change his name to François in order to fit with his Creole clients of Gallic descent.
His paintings show a French academic style as well as a sweetness and charm common to 19th-century German painting.
With the invention of the daguerreotype in 1839, Fleischbein also worked as an early photographer, an enterprise in which his wife took part.[1]
References
editBibliography
edit- Old Sketchbook recalls early New Orleans artist, Times-Picayuna, George E. Jordan, 1976
- Old Louisiana Plantation Homes and Family Trees, Herman de Bachelle Seebold, vol. 1, p 23
External links
edit- Media related to François Fleischbein at Wikimedia Commons
- Identity theft: A rare painting damaged, a story half-told, and a reckoning about bias in art stewardship - Article about a Fleischbein painting