Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Lorenzo de Nevers

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Lorenzo Nevers


Died
  
1967, North Smithfield, Rhode Island, United States

Lorenzo de Nevers (June 13, 1877 – March 29, 1967) was a Canadian artist. He was born at Baie-du-Febvre (today called Saint-Elphège), in the county of Yamaska, Quebec, Canada.

Contents

Early life

Eighth son of Abraham Boisvert and Marie Biron, he was part of the ninth immigrant generation in Quebec. At the fifth generation, the name ‘de Nevers’ was changed into ‘Boisvert’. Mr. Ernest Laforce, whose grandmother was the sister of Lorenzo de Nevers’s grandmother, explains the change as follows:

Three ‘de Nevers’ established themselves at Baie Saint-Antoine (called Baie-du-Febvre). One of them chose to establish himself at Coteau du Bois Vert. In order to be able to identify him differently from the others, people were calling him de Nevers from du Bois Vert, then Nevers known as Boisvert, then finally at the fifth generation, Boisvert only.

It is only in 1896, while the family had immigrated to Central Falls, Rhode Island, that Edmond, the elder brother, a lawyer, decided to take back the family name ‘de Nevers’ using a private law that was in force in Rhode Island. Lorenzo became then ‘de Nevers’.

Education

Lorenzo’s parents registered him in drawing courses in the Rhode Island School of Design. At about 17 years old, his brother Edmond, already studying in Paris, convinced his parents to send Lorenzo in Paris to study painting. The parents agreed to send him for one year. Lorenzo came back fifteen years later.

In Paris, under the supervision of Benjamin Constant and Jean-Paul Laurens, he followed during two years the Julian Academia courses which was, at the time, one of the best schools. He was a colleague of Pablo Picasso and Borduas.

According to Rosaire Dion-Levesque, Lorenzo was admitted to Paris Fine Arts in 1902. He spent ten years under the supervision of painting masters such as Gabriel Ferrier and Léon Bonnat. He came in ninth of 400 when he competed for the Rome Grand Prize. He showed a painting depicting ‘The escape to Egypt’.

Works

At the time, it was very common, more than today, for both beginners and more advanced artists to copy masterpieces, first to improve, second to reproduce in-demand paintings. However, there was an important rule: the copy could never be the same size as the original.

In the history archives of Canadian art, published by Owl’s Head Press for the Concordia University (Volume II, no 1, summer 1975), a study presented by Mr. Laurier Lacroix from Paris-X-Nanterre University, informs us on ‘the Canadian artists copyist in Louvre (1838-1915), John Lyman (1886-1967), the couple Dubé, Cornélius Krieghoff (1815-1872), Joseph-Charles Franchère (1891).

Career

Lorenzo also had a very nice baritone voice. He played on occasion at the Odeon and the Comic Opera, playing Excamillo in Carmen and Valentin in Faust.

He left Europe for good in 1914 because of the war and established himself in Central Falls where his brothers were. Then he moved in turn to Providence, New York, Central Park South where he stayed for 17 years and then Montreal for few years. In 1952 he came back to Central Falls. He travelled often to Montreal and Saint-Hyacinthe where he had many friends of which Mr and Mrs Henry Duprat and Madam’s sister (Rollande) and the painter Irène Legendre.

According to Philippe A. Lajoie, in US, on top of the portraits the old presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Dwight D. Eisenhower, and Thomas E. Dewey, New York’s governor, and Aram J. Pothier, Rhode Island’s governor, he painted the portraits of :

  • Hugo A. Dubuque, the first French-American judge in the Superior Court of Massachusetts, portrait ordered by Calumet Club and was as of March 1972 in the hands of Fall River Independent newspaper of which he was a co-founder in 1885;
  • full size portraits in the principal office of ‘Union Saint-Jean-Baptiste d’Amérique’ in Woonsocket : Mr. Henri T. Ledoux, of Nashua, N.H., third president ; J. Adélard Philias I. Jalbert, second director of ‘Caisse de l’Écolier de laSociété’;
  • Portraits of French-American mayors of Manchester, New Hampshire;
  • Portraits of four presidents of ’Association Canado-Américaine; Théophile B. Biron, Dr. Armand A.E. Brien, the juges Elphège J. Daignault and Adolphe Robert.
  • At Capitol of Rhode Island State and on the wall of ’Union Saint-Jean-Baptiste d’Amérique’ and ’Association Canado-Américaine’, people can admire about thirty paintings from Lorenzo de Nevers.
  • In the west of Canada, at the Prince-Albert Diocese in Saskatchewan, he decorated the cathedral as well as Mgr Prudhomme’s private chapel.

    In Montreal, he painted former prime ministers such as Sir Wilfrid Laurier and Louis Stephen Saint-Laurent; then Jacob Nichols, Cardinal Léger, Esioff Patenaude, lieutenant-governor (the painting disappeared in the fire at Bois de Coulonge on February 20, 1966), and the former Montreal mayor, Camillien Houde

    Recognition

    Lorenzo de Nevers also did landscape paintings. During his long career, over fifty years, he painted at least one thousand five hundred landscapes that now decorate homes in France, Belgium, Canada and United States.

    On Sunday, February 25, 1962, in Pawtucket, R.I. Lorenzo de Nevers was decorated with the medal from ‘Ordre du Mérite Franco-Américain’.

    In 1965 he joined his brother Wilfrid at Saint-Antoine hospice in Woonsocket. He died at Fogarty Hospital on March 29, 1967 at 89 years old.

    References

    Lorenzo de Nevers Wikipedia