Education
His art studies began at the École des Beaux-arts, where his teacher was Pierre Puvis de Chavannes.
His art studies began at the École des Beaux-arts, where his teacher was Pierre Puvis de Chavannes.
He made his début at the Salon in 1872 with landscapes and seascapes. Participating in their exhibitions on a regular basis for many years. In 1873, he joined with fellow painters Eugène-Baptiste Emile Dauphin, Gustave Garaud and Octave Gallian to establish a workshop in Toulon.
Together with his mentor, Puvis de Chavannes, he helped create the Société nationale des beaux-arts in 1890.
That same year, he was named a Chevalier in the Légion d"honneur. The following year, he introduced the famous Brazilian painter Giovanni Battista Castagneto to François Nardi, the maritime painter, who took Castagneto on as a student.
After 1892, he stopped painting along the Atlantic coast, in favor of Provence, where he painted landscapes and scenes of village life. In 1894, he was given a commission to decorate the Palais des Arts in Marseille.
Six years later, he produced two large paintings for Le Train Bleu, a famous restaurant filled with the work of notable painters, near the Gare de Lyon in Paris.
After World War I, he became a permanent resident at the château "Croix de Bontar", which had been built by his father, in Besse-sur-Issole, with a first floor museum devoted to the history of Brignoles. In 1921, he was named an official Peintre de la Marine and, the following year, he provided 34 illustrations for a new edition of Mireille by Frédéric Mistral, an author he greatly admired. A street and a small college in Besse-sur-Issole are named after him.