Charles-Frédéric Soehnée  

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Charles-Frédéric Soehnée (Born 3. November 1789 in Landau in der Pfalz as Carl-Friederich Söhne; died 1. May 1878 in Le Pré-Saint-Gervais in Paris) was a French painter.

Charles-Frédéric Soehnée was the fourth child of merchant Jacques Frédéric Soehnée and Caroline Wilhelmine (née Krueger), and was born 1789 in Laundau.

In 1979 his family founded the company "Soehnée l'aine & Cie". Their factories were located in the cities of Mulhouse, Colmar and Munster in Alsace. Their headquarters were in Paris where Soehnée eventually moved with his family.

In Paris Soehnée studied under the neoclassical painter Anne Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson. His classmate and friend Pierre Louis de Laval (1790-1842) painted a portrait of him in 1812. In 1818, he executed more a group of than one hundred drawings, watercolors, and at least one lithograph, most of which depict grotesque scenes of imaginary beasts and travelers against the backdrop of desert landscapes.

Soehnée researched and studied the techniques of the old masters, culminating in a technical treatise published in 1822 where he disputed the commonly held belief that Jan van Eyck invented oil painting. In it, he argued that the a mixture of encaustic and varnish could be the only explanation for the existence of much older paintings.

Soehnée went on to make a varnish and co-found the company Soehnée Frères in 1829 with one of his brothers, and began wealthy as a result. As far as is known, he never painted again after 1818.

Soehnée possessed a collection of drawings from Baroque painter Joseph Parrocel (1646–1704), which are now owned by the Louvre.

Bibliography

Mauries, Patrick Charles Frédéric Soehnée. Gallimard / Galerie J-M Le Fell 2006.




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Charles-Frédéric Soehnée" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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