ÃÂmile Lévy (August 29, 1826 in Paris – 1890) was a French genre and portrait painter.
He was a pupil of François-ÃÂdouard Picot and Abel de Pujol. He also studied at the ÃÂcole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He won the Grand Prix de Rome in 1854. On his return from Italy, he settled in Paris, and devoted himself to portrait painting. He exhibited in the Salon, receiving a first-class medal in 1878, and the Legion of Honor in 1867. Among the more important of his works are: âÂÂNoah Cursing Canaanâ (1855); âÂÂSupper of the Martyrsâ (1859); âÂÂDeath of Orpheusâ (1866), Luxembourg Museum; âÂÂLove and Follyâ (1874); âÂÂInfancyâ (1885); âÂÂThe Elements,â Salon of Ministry of State, Louvre; âÂÂPresentation of the Virgin,â Trinity Church, Paris.