“Like other regional museums in (France), the Lyon Museum of Fine Art was founded immediately following the French Revolution. In accordance with the ideals being promoted at that time, the works of art confiscated during the Revolution were to be conserved and made accessible to as man as possible. They were also to bolster the Lyon silk industry by providing study models for the factories’ artisans and designers.
More than two hundred years later the collections’ encyclopaedic orientations has made the Lyon Museum of Fine Arts one of the foremost museums in France…..”
1. Musee des Beaux-Art
Lyon Museum of Fine Arts
First created 15 Aug 2019. Version 1.0 - 5 Sep 2019. Daperro. London.
The Insane Woman. c1819. Gericault.
2. Egyptian Mummy Coffin
Apart from its large collection of
paintings, Musee des Beaux-Arts
Lyon also has a large collection
of objects and artefacts of
antiquity – Egyptian, Middle
Eastern, Italian etc.
3. Tapestry from Macau
An tapestry made in Macau in the early 17C. Lyon was a centre of the silk industry.
7. Perugino c1495
Perugino may have been a pupil of Pierro
della Francisca. Afterward he may have
worked in the workshop of Verrocchio.
8. Metsys c1509
The leading painter in Antwerp from
c1510 until his death and an
important influence for change in
northern European Art.
9. Cranach 1534
Cranach was a painter, an etcher and a
woodcut artist. He was in Vienna in 1503.
In 1505 became the Court Painter to the
Electors of Saxony and there he met Luther.
10. Greco 1579
The elongated people of El Greco (Domenikos Theotocopoulos) a Greek, who found fame and fortune in Spain.
13. Jan Bruegal & Hendrick von Baden 1611.
Bruegel was a satirist and one of the great landscape painter of his time. His paintings were often
packed with detials.
15. Rubens 1618.
An impressive painting, a typical Rubens
monumental work would undoubtedly have
attracted attentions, with its vigorous expression
and vivid colours.
It was painted in in 1620 for the Dominican church of St
Paul of Antwerp. The painting included two saints – St
Dominic and St Francis, protecting the world from the
lightning bolts thrown down.
19. Jordaens 1644.
Jordaens (1593-78) was born and died in
Antwerp, where he worked as an
assistance to Rubens. He is an example of
the pervasive effect of Rubens’s style, with
lively, active, animated, exuberant
settings. This painting is good example of
the Rubensque influence.
Self Portrait
20. Vouet 1636/7.
Vouet was a French artist. He was successful. He
spent some 14 years working in Italy.
26. Loo 1635.
Diana with her Nymphs (Detail). 1648. Jacob
van Loo. Gemaldegalerie Staatiche Museen
zu Berlin.
Jacob van Loo was a contemporary of Rembrandt.
28. Reni 1637.
Guido Cagnacci was part of the Bolognese Schools.
His mature works are characterized by their use of
chiaroscuro and their sensual subjects. His art,
mostly religious in subject, is known for its
unabashed, often unsettling eroticism and his life
was equally and notoriously unconventional.
29. Cagnacci c1657.
Lucrece c1657. Oil on canvas.
57x66 cm. Guido Cagnacci (1601-
63). Italian. 20 Jul 2019.
According to Roman legend,
Lucrece or Lucretia was a beautiful
noblewoman, wife of an early
Roman commander. She was raped
at knifepoint by the son of the
Roman king. Lucretia made her
husband and father swear to
avenge the deed, before she killed
herself. This caused an outraged by
the people who overthrew the
monarchy and founded the Roman
Republic
30. Zurbaran 1650.
Zurbaran is one of the greatest Spanish painters, despite his
limited technique. He specialised in Spanish devotional art
which was the prevail tradition of his time.
31. Le Brun 1674.
Charles LeBrun was and artist politician, a virtual dictator of
arts in France under Louis XIV. He was a pupil of Vouet and
went to Rome. In 1647 he exhibited an altarpiece for Notre
Dame, which began his success. In 1648 he took over the
foundation of the Academy.
38. Gericault 1819.
An exceptional painting which portrait the
angers and the sufferings of the insane mind.
He was one of the pioneers of the Romantic
movement.
39. Janmot 1835.
This is one of a collection of 16 paintings of the same theme by Janmot, between 1835 and 1881 at the gallery.
41. Ingres 1850.
Ingres was a bridge between
Neoclassicism and the rising
Romanticism of the time. He was a
creator of a complex art and at time
dazzling perfection. He also painted
Orientalist subjects.
42. Manet c1861.
Edouard Manet was destined to defy
tradition and overturn convention. His
paintings were primarily based on
Realism but used some of the
Impressionist style in his finishing, in
particular in his later works.
47. Renoir 1897.
Renoir had changed his style
several times in his life, although
most people still regard him as an
Impressionist.
By the time of this painting, Renoir
had all but abandoned
Impressionism, but he was always
a colourist. Note the soft focus of
this painting without any hard
lines mingled with patches of
colours.
50. All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective owners.
Available free for non-commercial and personal use.
The
End
Music – I Have a Dream. Guitar Moods
Monumental Staircase Decorations. 1884. Pierre Puvis de Chavannes..
52. With over a thousand of
paintings in more than
10 countries.
Editor's Notes
“Like other regional museums in (France), the Lyon Museum of Fine Art was founded immediately following the French Revolution. In accordance with the ideals being promoted at that time, the works of art confiscated during the Revolution were to be conserved and made accessible to as man as possible. They were also to bolster the Lyon silk industry by providing study models for the factories’ artisans and designers.
More than two hundred years later the collections’ encyclopaedic orientations has made the Lyon Museum of Fine Arts one of the foremost museums in France…..”
History of Major Releases
Version 1.0 Initial release with 46 slides.