# Paul Delaroche artist context and auction value notes

Canonical page: https://appraisily.com/artist/paul-delaroche/
Profile generated: 2026-05-23T13:51:00.000Z
Quality: high confidence, strong sources

## Artist identity

- Birth date: 1797-07-17
- Death date: 1856-11-04
- Nationality: French
- Movements: Academicism, Romanticism, Neoclassicism
- Common media: oil painting, sculpture, fresco

## About Paul Delaroche

Paul Delaroche (born Hippolyte-Paul Delaroche, 1797–1856) was a French painter and sculptor celebrated for his dramatic scenes drawn from English and French history. Trained under Antoine-Jean Gros, Delaroche developed a style that bridged Romantic emotion with Academic precision, rendering historical figures such as Marie Antoinette, Napoleon Bonaparte, and Lady Jane Grey with a pragmatic realism that avoided idealization. His work was enormously popular in his lifetime, and he became one of the most influential teachers in Paris, mentoring artists including Jean-Léon Gérôme, Thomas Couture, and Jean-François Millet. Delaroche also received major public commissions, including frescoes in the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Collectors today encounter his work primarily through historical paintings, sculptural reliefs, and the many prints engraved after his most famous compositions.

## Common works and media

Delaroche is best known for large-scale oil paintings of historical scenes, including subjects from the English Reformation, the French Revolution, and Napoleonic history. He also produced portraits, religious compositions, and sculptural works. Frescoes, drawings, and preparatory studies appear in museum and auction contexts. Prints and engravings after his paintings — produced by leading printmakers of the period — are widely collected in their own right and represent a common entry point for collectors encountering Delaroche's imagery.

## Market and appraisal context

Delaroche's original oil paintings appear at auction primarily in Old Master and 19th-century European painting sales. His historical subjects — especially well-known episodes from the English Tudor period and the French Revolution — tend to attract the strongest collector interest. Attribution is a key consideration: Delaroche maintained a busy studio, and workshop copies, follower works, and period reproductions of his popular compositions circulate widely. Prints and engravings after his paintings are common on the market as separate collectibles. Provenance linking a work to documented exhibition history or a notable 19th-century collection can significantly strengthen both attribution confidence and value. Condition assessment is important for works approaching two centuries of age.

## Appraisily data basis

Appraisily artist pages combine verified artist identity research from museum, library authority, and scholarly sources with auction records, auction-house context, sale dates, realized prices, and comparable lots when those records are available. This page draws on data from the Getty ULAN authority, RKD Netherlands Institute for Art History, VIAF, Wikidata, and public biographical references.

## Sources

- Wikidata: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q322582
- Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Delaroche
- Getty Vocabulary Program: https://vocab.getty.edu/page/ulan/500115439
- VIAF: https://viaf.org/viaf/100180689/
- Library of Congress: https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n50069678
- RKD Netherlands Institute for Art History: https://rkd.nl/en/explore/artists/21615
