French painter, engraver and illustrator (1813–1873)
Not to be confused with his brother, the French sculptor
Charles-François Lebœuf, also known as Nanteuil.
Célestin-François Nanteuil-Lebœuf, known as Célestin Nanteuil, (11 July 1813 – 6 September 1873) was a French painter, engraver and illustrator closely tied to the
Romantic movement in France. He was born in Rome of French parents who were part of
Joseph Bonaparte's entourage. Nanteuil entered the
École des Beaux-Arts in 1827, where he studied under
Eustache-Hyacinthe Langlois, and then worked in the studio of
Dominique Ingres. In 1848, he was made Director of
Académie des beaux-arts and later became the curator of the Musée des beaux-arts in
Dijon.[1] He died in
Bourron-Marlotte at the age of 60. His elder brother,
Charles-François, was a noted sculptor who won the
Prix de Rome in 1817.
Champfleury, Le drame amoureux de Célestin Nanteuil, d'après des lettres inédites adressées à Marie Dorval. Paris, Dentu et Cie, 1887 (in French)
Aristide Marie, Un Imagier romantique - Célestin Nanteuil peintre, aquafortiste et lithographe, Paris, Carteret, 1910 (in French)
Aristide Marie, Célestin Nanteuil. Peintre, Acquafortiste et Lithographe 1813-1873, Paris, H. Floury, 1924 (in French)
Marcus Osterwalder, Dictionnaire des Illustrateurs. 1800-1914 (Illustrateurs, caricaturistes et affichistes), Paris, Hubschmid & Bouret, 1983, p. 744-745 (in French)