Prix de Rome - Winners in The Painting Category

Winners in The Painting Category

  • 1663 - Pierre Monier or Mosnier or Meunier
  • 1673 - Louis de Boullogne
  • 1682 - Hyacinthe Rigaud
  • 1688 - Daniel Sarrabat
  • 1699 - Pierre-Jacques Cazes
  • 1700 - Alexis Simon Belle
  • 1709 - Jean Antoine Watteau (dit Antoine Watteau) - "Second Grand Prize"
  • 1711 - François Lemoyne
  • 1720 - François Boucher
  • 1721 - Charles-Joseph Natoire
  • 1724 - Carle van Loo
  • 1727 - Pierre-Hubert Subleyras
  • 1734 - Jean-Baptiste Marie Pierre
  • 1736 - Noël Hallé
  • 1738 - Charles-Amédée-Philippe van Loo
  • 1741 - Charles-Michel-Ange Challe
  • 1746 - Gabriel François Doyen
  • 1752 - Jean-Honoré Fragonard
  • 1756 - Hughes Taraval
  • 1757 - Louis Jean-Jacques Durameau
  • 1758 - Jean-Bernard Restout
  • 1765 - Jean Bardin
  • 1766 - François-Guillaume Ménageot
  • 1767 - Jean-Simon Berthélemy
  • 1768 - François-André Vincent
  • 1769 - Joseph Barthélémy Le Bouteux, Pierre Lacour - "Second Grand Prize"
  • 1770 - Gabriel Lemonnier
  • 1771 - Joseph-Benoît Suvée
  • 1772 - Pierre-Charles Jombert, Anicet Charles Gabriel Lemonnier - "Second Grand Prize"
  • 1773 - Pierre Peyron
  • 1774 - Jacques-Louis David
  • 1775 - Jean-Baptiste Regnault
  • 1776 - Bénigne Gagneraux
  • 1778 - Jean-Antoine-Théodore Giroust
  • 1780 - Jean-Pierre Saint-Ours
  • 1782 - Antoine-Charles-Horace Vernet (dit Carle Vernet)
  • 1783 - François Gounod - "Second Grand Prize"
  • 1784 - Jean Germain Drouais, Guillaume Guillon-Lethière - "Second Grand Prize"
  • 1787 - François-Xavier Fabre
  • 1789 - Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson, Guillaume Guillon-Lethière - "Second Grand Prize"
  • 1790 - Jacques Réattu
  • 1792 - Charles Paul Landon
  • 1797 - Pierre-Narcisse Guérin, Louis-André-Gabriel Bouchet, Pierre Bouillon
  • 1798 - Fulchran-Jean Harriet
  • 1800 - Jean-Pierre Granger
  • 1801 - Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres
  • 1802 - Alexandre Menjaud
  • 1803 - Merry-Joseph Blondel
  • 1804 - Joseph-Denis Odevaere
  • 1805 - Félix Boisselier
  • 1807 - François Joseph Heim
  • 1808 - Alexandre-Charles Guillemot
  • 1809 - Jérôme-Martin Langlois
  • 1810 - Michel Martin Drolling
  • 1811 - Alexandre-Denis-Abel de Pujol
  • 1812 - Louis-Vincent-Léon Pallière
  • 1813 - François-Édouard Picot and Henri-Joseph de Forestier
  • 1815 - Jean Alaux (dit le Romain)
  • 1816 - Antoine Jean-Baptiste Thomas
  • 1817 - Léon Cogniet, Achille Etna Michallon - History
  • 1820 - Amable-Paul Coutan
  • 1821 - Joseph-Désiré Court, Jean-Charles-Joseph Rémond
  • 1823 - Auguste-Hyacinthe Debay
  • 1824 - Charles-Philippe Larivière
  • 1825 - André Giroux
  • 1830 - Émile Signol
  • 1831 - Henry-Frédéric-Schopin (or Chopin)
  • 1832 - Antoine Wiertz, Jean-Hippolyte Flandrin
  • 1833 - Gabriel Prieur
  • 1834 - Paul Jourdy
  • 1836 - Dominique Papety
  • 1837 - Thomas Couture
  • 1838 - Isidore Pils
  • 1839 - Ernest Hébert
  • 1840 - Pierre-Nicolas Brisset
  • 1842 - Victor Biennourry
  • 1844 - Félix-Joseph Barrias
  • 1845 - Jean-Achille Benouville, Alexandre Cabanel - “Second Prix de Rome”
  • 1847 - Jules Eugène Lenepveu
  • 1848 - Joseph Stallaert; William-Adolphe Bouguereau & Gustave Boulanger - “Second Prize”
  • 1849 - Gustave Boulanger
  • 1850 - William-Adolphe Bouguereau, Paul Baudry
  • 1853 - Henri-Pierre Picou
  • 1854 - Felix-Henri Giacomotti, Armand Bernard - “Second Prix de Rome”
  • 1857 - Charles Sellier
  • 1858 - Jean-Jacques Henner
  • 1859 - Benjamin Ulmann
  • 1860 - Ernest Michel
  • 1861 - Léon Perrault, Jules Joseph Lefebvre
  • 1864 - Diogène-Ulysse-Napoléon Maillart
  • 1865 - Jules Machard, André Hennebicq, Gustave Huberti
  • 1866 - Henri Regnault
  • 1868 - Édouard-Théophile Blanchard
  • 1869 - Luc-Olivier Merson
  • 1871 - Edouard Toudouze
  • 1873 - Aimé Morot
  • 1874 - Paul-Albert Besnard
  • 1875 - Léon Comerre, Jules Bastien-Lepage - “Second Prize”
  • 1876 - Joseph Wencker
  • 1880 - Henri Lucien Doucet
  • 1881 - Louis-Edouard-Paul Fournier
  • 1883 - Marcel Baschet, Émile Friant - “Second Prize”
  • 1884 - Edouard Cabane - "Second Prize"
  • 1889 - Ernest Laurent, Charles-Amable Lenoir
  • 1890 - Charles-Amable Lenoir
  • 1891 - Adolphe Déchenaud - “Second Grand Prize”, Hubert-Denis Etcheverry - “Second Prize”
  • 1894 - Auguste Leroux, Adolphe Déchenaud
  • 1898 - Jean-Amédée Gibert, Jules Joseph Lefebvre, Auguste Leroux - "Second Prize"
  • 1904 - Antonio Alice
  • 1905 - Albert Henry Krehbiel
  • 1907 - Louis Léon Eugène Billotey, Émile Aubry
  • 1908 - Jean Lefeuvre
  • 1910 - Jean Dupas
  • 1911 - Jean-Gabriel Domergue
  • 1912 - Gabriel Girodon
  • 1913 - Robert Davaux
  • 1914 - Victor-Julien Giraud, Jean Despujols
  • 1919 - Louis-Pierre Rigal
  • 1920 - Paul-Émile Bécat
  • 1921 - Constantin Font
  • 1922 - Pierre-Henri Ducos de La Haille
  • 1923 - Pierre Dionisi
  • 1924 - René-Marie Castaing
  • 1925 - Odette Pauvert - First "First Grand Prize" obtained by a woman
  • 1928 - Nicolas Untersteller
  • 1930 - Yves Brayer, Salvatore DeMaio
  • 1932 - Geoffrey Burnand
  • 1933 - Daniel Boza
  • 1934 - Pierre-Emile-Henri Jérôme
  • 1936 - Lucien Fontanarosa & Jean Pinet - “Premier Grand Prize”; Roger Bezombes
  • 1941 - Piet Schoenmakers
  • 1942 - Pierre-Yves Trémois – “Premier Grand Prize”
  • 1946 - José Fabri-Canti
  • 1947 - Louis Vuillermoz - “Premier Second Grand Prize”
  • 1948 - John Heliker
  • 1950 - Paul Collomb - “Premier Second Grand Prize”
  • 1951 - Daniel Sénélar - “Premier Grand Prize”
  • 1953 - Pierick Houdy
  • 1955 - Paul Ambille
  • 1960 - Pierre Carron
  • 1962 - Freddy Tiffou
  • 1963 - Jesus Fuertes
  • 1965 - Teresa Peña - first Spanish woman in being awarded with the "Grand Prize"
  • 1965 - Jean-Marc Lange
  • 1966 - Gérard Barthélemy
  • 1967 - Thierry Vaubourgoin - “Second Grand Prize”
  • 1968 - Michel Niel Froment

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Famous quotes containing the words winners, painting and/or category:

    The two real political parties in America are the Winners and the Losers. The people don’t acknowledge this. They claim membership in two imaginary parties, the Republicans and the Democrats, instead.
    Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. (b. 1922)

    Herein is the explanation of the analogies, which exist in all the arts. They are the re-appearance of one mind, working in many materials to many temporary ends. Raphael paints wisdom, Handel sings it, Phidias carves it, Shakspeare writes it, Wren builds it, Columbus sails it, Luther preaches it, Washington arms it, Watt mechanizes it. Painting was called “silent poetry,” and poetry “speaking painting.” The laws of each art are convertible into the laws of every other.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    I see no reason for calling my work poetry except that there is no other category in which to put it.
    Marianne Moore (1887–1972)