Louis-Jean-François Lagrenée (called Lagrenée l'aîné, Lagrenée the elder) (30 December 1724 – 19 June 1805) was a French rococo painter and student of Carle van Loo. He won the Grand Prix de Rome for painting in 1749 and was elected a member of the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture in 1755. His younger brother Jean-Jacques Lagrenée (called Lagrenée le jeune, Lagrenée the younger) was also a painter.
He was born in Paris on the 30th of December 1724 and from an early age he showed promise in drawing and painting.[1] During his youth, master painter members of the French Royal Academy offered a rolling programme of courses, open to the public (for a small fee), in life drawing and the principles and techniques of art. These courses gave academy members a chance to identify and nurture six of the most gifted young students in any given year and offer them a place on a scheme known as the École royale des élèves protégés, a scheme which offered free tuition with a small stipend for three years, preparing students for Prix de Rome competitions.[2] After being selected for and completing this three-year programme, under the tutelage of Carle van Loo, he won the Grand Prix de Rome on his first attempt in 1749, with the painting Joseph interpreting the dreams of Pharaoh (now lost).
As a student at the French Academy in Rome, he developed a "Formative if youthful fixation with Baroque painting".[3] Above all, he was inspired by the Bolognese School, particularly by the work of Guido Reni (1575–1642) and Francesco Albani (1578–1660). Later in his career, he acquired the epithet 'the French Albani' (l'Albane Francais).[4]
After returning from Rome in 1753, he set to work on a large painting - The Abduction of Deianira by the Centaur Nessus (Musée du Louvre) - which, when finished in 1755, was the reception piece which earned him a membership in the Royal Academy, by a unanimous vote. By this time, he was already considered something of a celebrity.[5]
On Monday the 10th of July 1758, at the age of 33, he married 16-year-old Anne-Agathe Isnard. Fifty-five years later, on 19 June 1805, his death certificate recorded that they were still married.[6]
His career blossomed in Paris, by completing many commissions for eminent patrons and members of a flourishing new financial community as well as submitting regular entries to the Paris salon exhibitions. His reputation caught the attention of Elizabeth Petrovna, Empress of Russia, who, in 1760, appointed him to the offices of the director of the Imperial Academy of Arts and that of her principal court painter.[7] After only two years in Russia, he returned to Paris to take up the appointment of professor-rector at the Royal Academy.
He spent the years between 1781 and 1787 at the Villa Medici in Rome, in his capacity as director of the French Academy. A final return to Paris saw him appointed to the position of honorary curator-director (administration) of the Louvre museum. He was made a Knight of the Legion of Honour on the 15th of July 1804 by Napoleon I.[8] He died the following year.