In 1867 Gratia returned to France after 17 years of absence and settled in
Lunéville. Gratia fell out with his wife and they divorced. Louise, his second daughter, died soon after. Gratia thought she had died of grief. Later he remarried. He returned to work, and among those that he submitted to the Salons are the
Comte and Comtesse de Bourcier;
Baronne de Bouvet;
Famille Gaillard;
Madame Salomon de Rothschild and her daughter;
Madame Achille Fould and two portraits of
Monseigneur Lavigerie, Bishop of Nancy. He also made portraits of
Général de Montaigu and
Maréchal and Maréchale Bazaine, two excellent pieces that were burned during the
Paris Commune in 1871. In 1870 the
Académie de Stanislas in
Nancy gave him a medal of honor. Gratia continued to submit works to the Salon de Paris, including
Monsieur et Madame Demasure (1881) and
Monsieur et Madame Montigny (1884). After twenty years in Lunéville Gratin moved to nearby
Nancy around 1887, to an apartment in the Stanislas district, overlooking the convent of the Assumption. Works submitted to the Salon included
Self-portrait (1887),
Portrait of my wife and child (1888),
Singing Monk (1890),
Madame Vernolle (1890);
Madame Savoie (1891),
Mademoiselle Schwartz (1891);
Madame Montigny, painter (1892);
Madame Cottereau (1892);
Madame Husson (1894);
Madame Hamel and Paul-Maurice, her son (1895). Apart from these portraits, he made various genre pieces such as
Man of Arms,
Young Woman playing with a parakeet,
Bohemian woman,
Harvest at Loulou,
Young Woman with Lilacs and so on. In 1892 the ''L'Association des artistes lorrains'' was founded with Gratia as first president. (1910) In 1893 Gratia became very ill, and his family took him to
Rouen, Normandy. He lived in Normandy for fifteen months, during which time he received no commissions and began to run through his small savings. He had two very young sons to support. He returned to Paris, where
Raymond Poincaré, the Minister of Fine Arts, paid 2,000 francs to buy
La Liseuse for the State. Soon after the Nancy Museum paid 1,500 francs for his portrait of his first wife. In Paris Gratia ran an employment office on the Rue Lamartine for seven years. In 1896, when aged 81, Gratia made one of his most impressive portraits,
Thinking Monk a self-portrait. He no longer had a studio, but painted it in his small apartment on Avenue Laumière in
Buttes-Chaumont. Gratia was given a small pension for his services to art. In his last years he could no longer obtain commissions, since he had to compete with the
Impressionist painters and with photography. He died in poverty at the age of 95 in Montlignon on 11 August 1911. His admirers erected a monument in his memory. His eldest son,
Louis Émile, became a musician and composer. His second son, Maurice, became an actor. ==Work==