Jump to content

Julie Vieusseux

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Kerry Raymond (talk | contribs) at 01:16, 20 June 2020 (top: oz tags, replaced: → {{Use dmy dates}}). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Julie Elizabeth Agnes Vieusseux née Matthieu (4 August 1820 - 11 March 1878) was an Australian painter, and educator. She was the founder and manager of the Vieusseux Ladies’ College in Melbourne, between 1857 and 1878.

Life

Julie Vieusseux was born in the Netherlands to the Belgian army captain Louis Emile Matthieu and Catherine van de Winkle. She was educated in Paris. In 1849, she married the English civil engineer, architect and surveyor Lewis Vieusseux. Both were of French Huguenot descent. In 1852, she emigrated with her spouse, two sons and her sister to Melbourne in Australia.

Vieusseux established herself as a painter the same year of her arrival in Australia. While her spouse departed for the gold fields, she exhibited her paintings. At the third Victorian Industrial Society Exhibition held in December 1852, Vieusseux was decorated for her art.

In 1857, Vieusseux founded the Vieusseux Ladies’ College. Her school swiftly became a highly fashionable establishment, were the upper classes enrolled their daughters. In 1863, the school had 103 students, an unusually high number for a contemporary Australian school for girls. While successful during the lifetime of Julie Vieusseux the Vieusseux Ladies’ College was swiftly replaced by the Presbyterian Ladies' College after her death, and closed four years after her death.

References