Ludovic-Napoléon Lepic

Ludovic Lepic

Etching by Marcellin-Gilbert Desboutin, c.1876

Vicomte Ludovic-Napoléon Lepic (1839–1889) was a French artist, archaeologist and patron of the arts. He is best remembered today as a friend of Edgar Degas, who included him in some eleven paintings and pastels. He was among the original Impressionist group and later became a recognised marine painter.

Life and career

Vicomte Ludovic-Napoléon Lepic was the grandson of the Napoleonic general Louis Lepic, from whom the title had descended. His father was Louis-Joseph Napoléon Lepic, who also followed a military career and was a close supporter of Napoléon III. Destined for a similar career, Ludovic persuaded his father to allow him to train as a painter, originally with Gustave Wappers, the official painter of the Belgian King, and later with the French animal painter Charles Verlat, who encouraged him to take up etching. Much of Lepic’s early work was in this genre and he joined the Société des aquafortistes in 1862. Next year he gained notability for his sentimental etching For the poor,[1] after which he undertook further training from Charles Gleyre and the academic artist Alexandre Cabanal.

In the next few years he took up archaeology and between 186976 was a member of the Société d’anthropologie de Paris. In 1872, he founded a museum at Aix-les-Bains and published a ground-breaking illustrated work on prehistoric tools, Les armes et les outils préhistoriques reconstitués.[2] His experiments with etching during this time were equally innovatory and he developed the technique of ‘variable etching’ (eau-forte mobile) where, by varying the ink on the plate, he was able to produce individual results at each printing.[3] He was to teach this technique to his old friend Edgar Degas and the two co-operated on, and duly signed, Degas' large monotype The ballet master of 1874, now in the National Gallery of Art, Washington.[4]

Lepic and Degas were friends as young men with similar interests and were to co-operate in other ways too.[5] It was Degas who persuaded Lepic to help plan and participate in the first two Impressionist exhibitions, but insistence by the group that he should not exhibit at the same time in the official Salon led Lepic to distance himself from them.[6] During this time he had bought himself a boat and from 1877 paid annual visits to the town of Berck, south of Le Touquet, which was an artistic haven also for other artists on the fringes of Impressionism such as Édouard Manet and Eugène Boudin. It is for his depictions of the beach and fishing boats there that Lepic is particularly remembered as a painter today.[7] In 1883 he achieved recognition by being appointed an official marine painter by the state, following his growing popularity after the award of a medal at the 1877 Salon. In 1879, he had a large individual exhibition of some 100 pictures at the Gallery “La vie moderne” and in 1883 he exhibited 150 at the Musée des Arts décoratifs. In between he had published an illustrated account of an archaeological trip to Egypt, La dernière Egypte (1881).

Lepic's painting of "The Smashed Boat" was one of the medal-winners at the 1877 Salon

The appearance of Lepic in several works by Degas records some of the enthusiasms they had in common. These included horse racing and Degas' Gentlemen’s race: Before the start (1862; Musée d’Orsay) pictures Lepic mounted among the jockeys.[8] Ballet was another enthusiasm. Lepic is shown gazing through opera glasses in The ballet from Robert le Diable (1871; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York), one of Degas’ earliest treatments of the subject,[9] and in quarter profile from behind in the Victoria & Albert Museum’s larger copy (1876).[10] Lepic’s fondness for dogs, evidenced by his many etchings, resulted in Degas’ final pastel of Lepic holding one in the Cleveland Museum of Art (1889).[11] Earlier he had included another dog in the amusing Place de la Concorde, in which the elegantly dressed and cigar-smoking Viscount strides to the right, an umbrella under his arm, while his two daughters and the dog all face the other way. Earlier still the daughters appeared on either side of their father in the intimate painting Count Lepic and His Daughters (1870).

Notwithstanding his marriage in 1865 with Joséphine Scévole de Barral, the mother of these daughters, Lepic was later to take the prima ballerina Marie Sanlaville as his mistress and designed dresses for the ballets in which she danced, including the Harlequin costume for Les Jumeaux de Bergame. Degas was also to sketch this while it was in rehearsal in 1885. In 1889 he was suddenly taken ill and Marie Sanlaville cared for him at her apartment until his death in October. He was then interred in the vault at the family property at Andrésy.

References

Sources and further reading

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