Gabriel Loppé

Gabriel Loppé
Gabriel Loppé autoportrait photo.jpg
Photographic self-portrait, circa 1890
Born1825
Died1913
NationalityFrench
Known forPainting, Photography, Mountaineering

Gabriel Loppé (July 2, 1825 - May 19, 1913) was a French painter, photographer and mountaineer. He became the first foreigner to be made a member of the Alpine Club in London.

Biography

Crevasses on the Glacier du Geant, Mont Blanc Massif, John Mitchell Fine Paintings, London

His father was a captain in the French Engineers and Loppé's childhood was spent in many different towns in south-eastern France.[1]

At the age of twenty-one, Loppé climbed a small mountain in the Languedoc and found a group of painters sketching on the summit. He had found his calling and subsequently went off to Geneva where he met the reputed leading Swiss landscapist, Alexandre Calame (1810 -1864).[2]

Loppé took up mountaineering in Grindelwald in the 1850s and made friends easily with the many English climbers in France and Switzerland. Although he was frequently labelled as a pupil of Calame and his rival Francois Diday, Loppé was almost an entirely self-taught artist. He became the first painter to work at higher altitudes during climbing expeditions, earning the right to be considered the founder of the peintres-alpinistes school, which became established in the Savoie at the turn of the nineteenth century.[3] Together with the first ascent of Mont Mallet in Chamonix’s Grandes Jorasses range, Loppé made over forty ascents of Mont Blanc during his climbing career, which lasted until the late 1890s.[4]

Loppé frequently made oil sketches from alpine summits, including a panorama of the view from the summit of Mont Blanc. His paintings became celebrated for their atmosphere and spontaneity, and he soon found himself taking part in many exhibitions in London and in Paris. By 1896 Loppé had spent over fifty seasons climbing and painting in Chamonix.[5] As the valley’s unrivalled ‘Court painter’ his work was in constant demand, with the majority of his pictures going to English climbers and summer tourists.[6] In his later years, Loppé became fascinated with photography and was quite an innovator in this field too. His long exposure photograph of the Eiffel Tower struck by lightning, now in the Musée d'Orsay in Paris remains one of his iconic images.

Notes

  1. ^ Liabeuf, Brigitte (9 Dec 2005). Voyages en montagne : Gabriel Loppé. Fage Editions. ISBN 2849750743.
  2. ^ Mitchell, William J, Gabriel Loppé Peintre-Alpiniste (2018), John Mitchell Fine Paintings, ISBN 9781999652104
  3. ^ Borgeaud, Marie-Noel (20 Nov 2002). Gabriel Loppé. Peintre, photographe & alpiniste. Glénat. ISBN 2723439860.
  4. ^ Mitchell, William. Peaks and Glaciers, John Mitchell Fine Paintings, London 2009,2010,2011, 2012,2013,2014,2015, 2016, 2017, 2018. John Mitchell Fine Paintings.
  5. ^ Catalogue raisonné of Gabriel Loppé - Gallery antiquity of Bourget-du-lac in France
  6. ^ Voyages en montagne, Gabriel Loppé. Collectif, Fage éditions. 2005.

References

  • Schurr, Gérald (1975). Les petits Maîtres de la peinture. Editions de l'Amateur. ASIN B0000DY6TE
  • Borgeaud , Marie-Noël (2002). Gabriel Loppe : Peintre et alpiniste. Glénat. ISBN 2723439860
  • Liabeuf, Brigitte (2005). Voyages en montagne : Gabriel Loppé. Fage Editions. ISBN 2849750743
  • Mitchell, William J, Gabriel Loppé Peintre-Alpiniste, (John Mitchell Fine Paintings, London, 2018), ISBN 9781999652104

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