Background
He added his mother’s patronymic to his father’s to distinguish himself from his brother, the poster designer René Vincent.
He added his mother’s patronymic to his father’s to distinguish himself from his brother, the poster designer René Vincent.
Vincent-Anglade was a pupil of Gustave Moreau, Fernand Corom and Francois Flameng at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, and also Amable Pinta. He exhibited in Paris and regularly appeared at the usual exhibitions, especially the Salon des Artistes Français, where he was awarded a distinction in 1903. Early in his career, Vincent-Anglade became a fashionable portrait painter, mainly of intimate paintings of women.
He was a regular at greyhound and horse races and was an enthusiast of big game hunting.
He was also valued as an animal painter.