Joseph Victor Ranvier (1832-1896)
[Joseph Ranvier, Victor-Joseph Ranvier]
Pupil of:
| Janniot and Richard |
The education of the infant Bacchus, our mythologies inform us, was confided by his immortal
father Zeus to the nymphs of Nysa in Thrace, to which fact lexicographers attribute his
ancient Greek title of Dionysus. The young god's childhood must have been a pleasant one,
spent as it was among the Thracian groves and by the banks of the smiling river Nysa,
in which the artists shows him sporting with the ripples of the genial flood. The painter,
Joseph Vincent Ranvier, is a native of Lyons, and learned to draw at the local art school
in order to become a designer for the silk and wall-paper manufacturers. Having succeeded
in accumulating a modest capital of his earnings in the service of industrial art, he settled
in Paris as a pupil of Janniot and of Richard, and won his first medal at the Salon of 1865.
He became a favorite artist in the field of figure, and received the cross of the Legion of Honor in 1878.
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