Drawing attributed to Jean Antoine Constantin known as Constantin d'Aix, an artist from Marseilles who settled in Aix en Provence
After studying in Rome, he returned to France and devoted himself to painting and drawing landscapes.
In 1787 and until the Revolution, he was appointed director of the drawing school in Aix-en-Provence (his students included François-Marius Granet and Auguste de Forbin) then professor at the school in Digne under the Empire.
He returned to Aix in 1813, where he settled permanently. Throughout his life, Granet and Forbin supported him, allowing him to receive the gold medal at the Paris Exhibition in 1817, the title of Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur in 1833, as well as a lifelong pension.
Highly prized by Provençal families, he is often considered the "father of Provençal painting". He played a key role in the emergence of a taste for landscape in this region, but also beyond, thanks to his students, many of whom had more prestigious careers than his own. Constantin drew from life, using wash to capture a chosen point of view as faithfully as possible, or pen to fill his many sketchbooks. He also enjoyed drawing sites and views of cities, which he then reworked in his studio, sometimes mixing brown ink and gray ink in a more elaborate way.
Old restorations, one fold, changed mat
Dimensions with frame: 89 x 75.5 cm
Dimensions of drawing: 39.5 x 31cm