Youth He was born in
Sainte-Anne, Guadeloupe, out of wedlock, to Marie-Françoise Dupepaye, a
free person of color, and Pierre Guillon, a colonial Royal Notary. He and his sister, Andrèze, could not be legally recognized as Guillon's children until 1794, when the
Code Noir was abolished. In 1774, after displaying an early aptitude for art, his father took him to France, where he was placed with the painter
Jean-Baptiste Descamps, at the new free drawing school in
Rouen. It was there that he adopted the name "Lethière", derived from "letier" (third, as in "third son"). He remained there for three years, then went to Paris and became a student of
Gabriel François Doyen at the
Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture. He held his first exhibit at the
Salon in 1795, with paintings he had created in Rome.
Later years In 1799, he married the widow Marie-Joseph-Honorée Vanzenne. She can be seen in his portraiture
Woman Leaning on a Portfolio. A daughter from her first marriage,
Eugénie, would also become a painter. The following year, he accompanied the newly appointed Ambassador,
Lucien Bonaparte, to Spain, where he helped him build an art collection. Through Bonaparte's recommendation, he was appointed Director of the
French Academy in Rome in 1807.
Return to France Lethière returned to Paris in 1792, where he undertook artistic production for a decade – a critical success. However, there were many societal transformations that came with this period, notably the execution of the king and queen of France, and the abolition of the monarchy. Despite the political turmoil, Lethière established a studio in Paris and became one of the most renowned artists of the time. He created
Erminia and the Shepherds (
Dallas Museum of Art), a love story during the Renaissance and the Middle Ages. There was also the
Frieze Representing the Neuf Thermidor (Musée d’art et d’histoire), which was exhibited at the Salon of 1798, and
Woman Leaning on a Portfolio (
Worcester Art Museum), which was exhibited at the
Salon of 1799. The latter is more personal, depicting his stepdaughter Eugénie, whom he personally trained. The prominence of the artist is depicted in
Louis-Léopold Boilly’s portrait
Meeting of Artists in Isabey’s Studio (
Musée du Louvre), where Lethière can be seen wearing a red cloak near the center. Along with his artistic success, he was legally recognized by his father in 1799.
Tenure at the Villa Medici '', 1811,
Nottingham Castle Museum, England Lethière had finally arrived at the Académie de France in Rome, though contrary to his expectations, the campus had moved from the Palazzo Mancini to the Villa Medici, where conditions seemed desperate. Under Lethière’s influence, students were no longer underfunded, the building was renovated, and the academy gained order. During this time, Lethière created three of the most technically difficult paintings in his career. The first was the Judgment of Paris (1812, private collection), which marked his turn to grand-scale paintings. The latter were the lyrical Homer Singing His Iliad at the Gates of Athens (1814, Nottingham City Museums and Galleries), and the monumental version of Brutus Condemning his Sons to Death (1811, Musée du Louvre), which were both showcased in London from 1816 to 1819. In 1818 he was elected to the
Académie des Beaux-Arts. That same year, he also became a Knight in the
Legion of Honor. A year later, he became a professor at the
École des Beaux-Arts. He ended his career as a member of the
Institut de France. , Williamstown
Students As a head of a studio, a director, and a professor, Lethière dedicated a lot of his time to mentoring the future generation. His numerous well-known students included
Horace Lecoq de Boisbaudran,
Jean-Louis Gintrac,
François Bouchot,
Louis Boulanger,
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres,
Eugène Devéria,
Louis Joseph César Ducornet,
Isidore Pils,
Théodore Rousseau,
Kanuty Rusiecki,
Octave Tassaert, and his stepdaughter, Eugénie. Many of his students were successful, frequently winning the highly renowned Grand Prix de Rome for historical and historical landscape painting. Lethière was specially known for giving opportunities to young women, many of whom had family connections to the Caribbean. His pupils include genre painter and portraitist
Hortense Haudebourt-Lescot (1784–1845), who painted
The Wedding Trip (1825, Clark Art Institute) – a painting that reflects her time in Italy.
Death In 1830, there was an uprising that led to the deposition of King Charles X, and the ascent of his cousin Louis Philippe. Lethière was commissioned to depict this event, more commonly known as the July Revolution, on a large-scale painting. However, he shortly passed away the following year and the canvas was left unfinished in his studio. Though Lethière has been overshadowed by his many peers in France, he is remembered and revered by those in Guadeloupe. ==Selected works==