Napoléon Bourassa
Napoléon Bourassa | |
---|---|
Born | 1827 L'Acadie, Quebec, Canada |
Died | 1916 Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Nationality | Canadian |
Known for | architect and artist |
Napoléon Bourassa (French pronunciation: [napɔleɔ̃ buʁasa]; October 21, 1827 – August 27, 1916) was a prominent Canadian architect, painter and writer whose offices were located in Montreal, Quebec.
Early life and training
[edit]Born in L'Acadie, Quebec, he studied at Sulpician College in Montreal. In 1848, he interned with Norbert Dumas in preparation for a legal career, but then chose to become a painter and studied with Theophile Hamel from 1850 to 1852.
He continued his education by visiting Paris, Rome and Florence accompanied by the German painter Johann Friedrich Overbeck, a member of the Nazarene movement. After this he established his art studio in Montebello.[1]
Practice
[edit]Bourassa founded and directed the Canadian Journal and became vice-president of the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Society. He resided on 430 Rue Bonsecours Montreal. Bourassa had several associates who became famous, including Louis-Philippe Hébert, François-Édouard Meloche and Olindo Gratton. He also sculpted the bust of his father-in-law Louis-Joseph Papineau.
He designed the "Chapelle Notre-Dame de Lourdes de Montréal" and the "Institut Nazareth et Louis Braille". One of his most familiar paintings is The Apotheosis of Christopher Columbus.
In 1877, he was a member of a commission of inquiry of the government of Quebec and went to France to study the organization, the functioning and the teaching methods of the schools of arts and crafts and the schools of drawing applied to industry, architecture and mechanics.[2]
In 1880, he founded the National Gallery of Canada with his fellow artists. He consulted in 1883 for the construction of a building to house the Legislative Assembly of Quebec.
He died August 27, 1916, in Lachenaie. His daughter Adine published his correspondence in 1929. The "Fund-Napoleon Bourassa" was created in his honor at the University of Ottawa.[1] His works were exhibited at Galerie L'Art français[3]
Family
[edit]Napoléon Bourassa was married to Azélie Papineau, the daughter of the Quebec politician Louis-Joseph Papineau. One of his sons was Henri Bourassa, a journalist and the founder of the newspaper Le Devoir.
Works include
[edit]- Dominican convent of Saint-Hyacinthe
- Chapel of the Ladies of Sacred Heart
- Chapelle Notre Dame de Lourdes de Montréal
- Chapelle du Manoir Louis-Joseph Papienau
- Church of Montebello, Quebec
- St. Anne Shrine (Fall River, Massachusetts)[4]
- Church of Saint-Hugues
- Church of Saint-Ours
- Renovation of the Saint Hyacinthe the Confessor Cathedral of Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec
Honours
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Vézina, Raymond. "BOURASSA, NAPOLÉON". Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online, 1911-1920 (Volume XIV). University of Toronto/Université Laval. Retrieved 26 February 2011.
- ^ Hamel, Réginald; Wyczynski, Paul (1989). Dictionnaire des auteurs de langue française en Amérique du Nord. Fidès. ISBN 978-2-7621-1475-1. OCLC 21163604. Retrieved 2021-04-28.
- ^ Vie des arts, été 1965, n°39, p. 57, "Galerie L'Art français, 370 ouest, rue Laurier, 10-25 mai: Bourassa" http://www.erudit.org/feuilletage/index.html?va1081917.va1201505@64
- ^ https://www.st-annes-shrine.org/ St. Anne Shrine, Fall River
- ^ "Members since 1880". Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Archived from the original on 26 May 2011. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
Further reading
[edit]- Vézina, Raymond. Napoléon Bourassa (1827-1916): 60th Anniversary.... The exhibition and [this] catalogue were prepared by Raymond Vézina. [Ottawa, Ont.]: Public Archives Canada, 1976. Title also in French; texts printed, tête-bêche, in English and French. Without ISBN