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A prominent landscape and
marine painter, Jules Eugène Pages spent most of his career in
France where he was a well-known Impressionist painter, but he
maintained close ties to his native city of San Francisco and was
influential in introducing that painting style to Northern
California.
He was born in San Francisco, California on May 16, 1867 and was
raised in the artistic milieu of his father's engraving business,
where he worked as an apprentice.
In 1888 he sailed to Paris to study at Academie Julian under Jules
Lefebvre, Benjamin Constant, and Fleury. After returning to San
Francisco, he worked as an illustrator for the "Examiner" and "Call"
newspapers.
Upon returning to Paris in 1902, he began teaching night classes at
the Academie Julian and served as its director. Pages gained
international recognition while in France and was made a Chevalier
of the Legion of Honor in 1910.
In 1915 he exhibited at the Panama Pacific International Exposition
and was a
member of the International Jury of Awards. Although he remained in
France
for forty years, he returned to his native city often to visit and
exhibit.
At the outbreak of World War II, Pages returned to San Francisco and
died
there on May 22, 1946. He was a member of the Bohemian Club;
International Society of Sculptors & Painters in Paris.
He exhibited at the Paris Salon, 1895 with honorable mention, and
won Gold Medals there in 1899 and 1905. He also exhibited at the
Steckel Gallery in Los Angeles in 1909; at the Bohemian Club, 1924,
solo exhibition; the California Palace of Legion of Honor, 1946
memorial exhibition.
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