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Louis Eugène Mouchon

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Name
  
Louis-Eugene Mouchon


Louis-Eugene Mouchon

Born
  
30.08.1843
Paris, France

Died
  
03.03.1914 Montrouge, Hauts-de-Seine, France

Occupation
  
Graphic artist Painter Engraver Medalist

Awards
  
knight of the Legion of Honor (1895) Grand prize for engraving (1900)

Louis-Eugène Mouchon (30 August 1843, Paris – 1914) was a French painter, graphic artist, medalist, engraver and sculptor. He created state papers, stamps, coins, currency and medals. He was the son and pupil of Louis Claude Mouchon, the painter. He exhibited at the Salon from 1876 onwards and became an Associate of the Artistes Francais in 1888. His most famous stamps are the Mouchon series and the Navigation & Commerce series of French postage stamps. His medals can be found in the collection of several museums.

Contents

Postage stamps

Next to stamps for France, Mouchon also designed for Abyssinia, Argentina, Belgium (Brussels Exhibition), Greece, Guatemala, Luxemburg, Monaco, the Netherlands, Persia, Portugal and colonies, Russia and Serbia.

Medals and currency

Mouchon entered the field of medal making at the age of forty three. He was made a knight of the Legion of Honor in 1895 and won the grand prize for engraving at the Universal Exposition in Paris, 1900. He designed coins and the plates for currency for Portugal.

References

Louis-Eugène Mouchon Wikipedia