French artist born in Paris on May 24, 1868, died on December 4, 1903 in Neuilly sur Seine. French artist, portrait painter, watercolorist, engraver, illustrator and teacher of the Belle Époque.
Maximilienne Guyon (wife Goepp) is one of the rare women artists of the end of the 19th century to have been trained at the Académie Julian by prestigious teachers, some of whom are also present in the collections of the La Roche-sur-Yon museum, such as Tony Robert-Fleury (Romeo and Juliet), Jean-Paul Laurens (Landscape) and William Bouguereau. Recognized as a portraitist, watercolorist and illustrator, she exhibited regularly at the Salon des Artistes Français from 1887 to 1903. In 1893, she was one of thirty women artists who represented France at the Chicago World's Fair.
Her workshop located at 82 boulevard Bineau in Neuilly-sur-Seine was sold at auction on January 10 and 11, 1904. She married in 1889 to the painter Georges Charles Albert Goepp (1860-?), with a son, Albert Olivier Maxime Goepp (1890). -?).
Dimensions with its frame 67x85