Édouard Alexandre Sain (13 May 1830 - 26 June 1910) was a French painter whose works included historical and genre subjects as well as portraits.
Sain was strongly interested in antiquity.
He first settled at Écouen, where he painted various rustic scenes in the plein air style, but experimented with other styles.
His paintings from this period include Vénus et l'Amour, a group of chimney sweeps and a historical painting of the period of Louis XV.
He first exhibited at the Salon in 1853, where he twice obtained the medal.
An 1855 oil painting by Sain commemorates a visit by the Emperor and Empress of France to the crèche of Sister Rosalie.
This work seems to have been undertaken on his own initiative. It was not purchased by the state or exhibited at the Salon.
In November 1863 Sain left on a trip to Rome, and in 1864 went on to Naples. He drew Mount Vesuvius and visited Pompei.
In July 1864 he reached Capri, where he was inspired to make various paintings in what was then considered the modern style, although with classical elements.
His 1865 Fouilles à Pompéi (Excavations at Pompei) - Musée d'Orsay, Paris - depicts a group of barefoot women carrying baskets over their heads.
Other paintings include Le Payement (Rome, 1865), Fileuse à Capri, Romaine (1870), Napolitaine (1870), La Convalescente en pèlerinage à la madone d'Angri (1873), La Marica de Capri (1874), Le Repas de noces à Capri (1875), Jésus et la Samaritaine (1876) and Andromède (1877).
He recorded his trip to Italy in an 1879 book, Souvenirs d'Italie. Impressions de voyage.
From the late 1870s Sain devoted himself exclusively to the art of portrait and female figures. For his portraits he often took members of fashionable society, and took care over the composition and accessories while also capturing the expression of the sitter.
His portraits were generally simple and elegant.
He painted Virginie Amélie Avegno Gautreau, a demure and conventional portrait quite unlike the 1883 painting of the same model by John Singer Sargent that had created a recent stir.
Sain was awarded the Legion of Honour in 1877.
Edward Sain was a friend of Carolus-Duran, who gave him the Legion of Honour and made his portrait.
Edward Sain died on 26 June 1910 in the 9th arrondissement of Paris, France. | © Wikipedia
Édouard Alexandre Sain (Cluny, 13 maggio 1830 - Parigi, 26 giugno 1910) è stato un pittore Francese.
Sain nacque a Cluny, figlio di Paul-François-Toussaint Sain e di Palmire-Ernestine Bouchet.
Suo padre era un esattore di contributi e non influenzò la vocazione artistica del figlio. Édouard, già da fanciullo incline all'arte, frequentò le Scuole superiori d'arte e di disegno di Valenciennes (dette "Accademia di Valenciennes") per essere poi ammesso, nel 1847, all'École des beaux-arts di Parigi. Qui divenne allievo di François-Édouard Picot.
Terminati gli studi d'arte Sain debuttò al Salon di pittura nel 1853 e continuò ad esporvi finché, in due occasioni, fu premiato con una medaglia.
Sain fu all'inizio un pittore storico e di genere. Gran parte della sua ispiratone e delle sue idee egli le traeva dai suoi viaggi, dapprima nei Pirenei, quindi in Italia.
In seguito però, a partire dalla fine degli anni 1870, si dedicò soltanto all'esecuzione di ritratti e di figure femminili.
Fu legato da grande amicizia con il pittore Carolus-Duran, che, nel 1877, gli donò la sua decorazione di Cavaliere della Légion d'honneur e fece il suo ritratto. Nel 1894 fu nominato "Rosati" d'onore.
Édouard Sain si spense a Parigi all'età di 80 anni, in pieno XX secolo.