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MICHEL JEAN CAZABON IN TRINIDADBorn in Trinidad, the child of a free-coloured family whose origins were in the French West Indies and who moved to Trinidad from Martinique after 1789, Cazabon studied in Europe before setting up his studio in Port of Spain in 1848. He soon won the patronage of the Governor, Lord Harris, and of the wealthy planters Sir James Lamont and William Hardin Burnley, and his career developed in response to the demands of the local market. His output consisted mainly of scenes of Trinidad in watercolour and he produced drawings for two subscription albums of lithographs published in 1851 (Views of Trinidad) and 1857 (Album of Trinidad) as well as contributing to series of lithographs of Demerara and Martinique. Having exhausted his clientele in Trinidad, Cazabon and his family moved to St. Pierre, Martinique in 1862 in search of new patrons. He rented a house in rue Longchamps, St. Pierre and produced works for merchants and wealthy planters and illustrations for the French newspapers, but appears to have had little success and returned to Trinidad at the end of the 1860s. In Trinidad he had difficulties resuming his career and died a forgotten figure in 1888. PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION (LOTS 31-41)
Michel Jean Cazabon (1813-1888)
Sunlit Valley (Diego Martin Valley from Fort George), Trinidad
Details
Michel Jean Cazabon (1813-1888)
Sunlit Valley (Diego Martin Valley from Fort George), Trinidad
signed 'CAZABON' (lower left)
oil on canvas
unframed
18 x 24in. (45.7 x 61cm.)
Sunlit Valley (Diego Martin Valley from Fort George), Trinidad
signed 'CAZABON' (lower left)
oil on canvas
unframed
18 x 24in. (45.7 x 61cm.)
Provenance
Claude Salvatori, Trinidad.
Private collection.
Private collection.
Literature
G. MacLean, Cazabon An Illustrated Biography of Trinidad's Nineteenth Century Painter, Port of Spain, 1986, pp.112-3, no.36 (illustrated in colour) and 132 (TLO.00.ClS01).
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Amanda Fuller