Félix Trutat (27 February 1824 – 7 March 1848) was a French painter, known primarily for portraits and nudes.
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Félix Trutat | |
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![]() Portrait of the Artist and His Mother Portrait de l'artiste et de sa mère (1846) | |
Born | (1824-02-27)27 February 1824 Dijon, France |
Died | 7 March 1848(1848-03-07) (aged 24) Dijon, France |
He studied with Léon Cogniet and Pierre-Paul Hamon [fr] at the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He also absorbed stylistic influences from the Venetian Old Masters that he copied in the Louvre.[citation needed]
He died of tuberculosis at the age of twenty-four, with no known offspring.[citation needed]
Many of his works are reminiscent of Gustave Courbet. A majority of them are in the collection of the Musée des beaux-arts de Dijon; including his self-portrait. Among those on display elsewhere is a portrait of an unidentified woman at the Musée national Jean-Jacques Henner.[citation needed]
A street in Dijon has been named after him.[citation needed]
His cousin, Eugène Trutat, was a well known photographer and Director of the Muséum de Toulouse.
His first painting, Nude Girl on a Panther Skin, was used by John Berger to illustrate the concept of male gaze in his groundbreaking work Ways of Seeing.[1][2] (Berger identified it within the book by an alternate title, Reclining Baccante).[2]
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