Laurent Guétal

[1] He was ordained a priest in 1862, and spent much of his life at the Petit Séminaire of Rondeau, near Grenoble.

[2] His primary stylistic influence came from Jean Achard, but he eventually adopted a more purely realistic approach.

He was associated with the École de Crozant, and was one of the first members of the École dauphinoise [fr], a school of landscape painters in the Dauphiné, which included Ernest Victor Hareux and Charles Bertier.

One of his best known works, depicting the Lac de l'Eychauda, received an award there in 1886, and was chosen to be displayed at the Exposition Universelle (1889).

His native town has another well known work, "The End of the World at Allevard", in the Musée des beaux-arts et d'archéologie de Vienne [fr].

Laurent Guétal; bust by
Aimé Charles Irvoy