Marie-Philippe Coupin de la Couperie (1773, Sèvres - 1851, Versailles) was a French painter of the Troubadour style. He was a friend of the painter Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson.
Among his patrons were Joséphine de Beauharnais, who bought his The Tragic Love of Francesca da Rimini for her gallery at Château de Malmaison. He became professor of drawing at two French military schools: the Prytanée National Militaire and then the Ecole Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr.
Gallery
edit-
The Tragic Love of Francesca da Rimini, 1812 (Napoleon Museum, Arenenberg)
-
Sully montrant à son petit-fils le monument renfermant le cœur d'Henri IV, 1819
-
Gabrielle d'Arjuzon praying for the restoration of her mother's health, 1812 to 1814
-
Valentine de Milan pleurant son époux, 1822
-
A scene from Lord Byron's poem "The Corsair": The distraught Medora, reclining on a rock overlooking the shore, her garment swirling in the wind; the name of her husband, Conrad, is carved in Greek letters on the rock, 1820-23
-
Jupiter appearing at Semele's side while the young woman is sleeping; after Girodet 1826
External links
edit- Media related to Marie-Philippe Coupin de La Couperie at Wikimedia Commons
- de la Couperie on Artnet
- de la Couperie's lithograph Andromeda at the Art Institute of Chicago