Breton, Jules Adolphe, bruh TAWN, zhool ah DAWLF (1827-1906), was a French painter known for his sentimental scenes of peasant life. He painted rural subjects about the same time as the noted French artists Gustave Courbet and Jean Francois Millet. But the conservative French public of the Second Empire (1852-1870) rejected the work of Courbet and Millet as too realistic. They preferred Breton's idealized version of the peasant as healthy and satisfied with the social order. Breton's The Gleaner (1872) and The Song of the Lark (1884) are among his best-known pictures.
Vigee-Lebrun, Elisabeth, vee zhay luh BRUHN, ay lee za BEHT (1755-1842), was one of the most fashionable portrait painters in France before the… More>>
Rouault, Georges, roo OH, zhawrzh (1871-1958), was a French artist. He was a deeply religious man with strong moral convictions, and his works show… More>>
Ingres, Jean Auguste Dominique, AN gruh, zhahn oh GOOST daw mee NEEK (1780-1867), was a leading French artist who painted in the style known as… More>>
Chardin, shahr DAN, Jean Baptiste Simeon (1699-1779), is now regarded as one of the great French painters of the 1700's. Chardin was born on Nov.… More>>
Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de, too LOOZ loh TREHK, ahn REE duh (1864-1901), was a French artist. His favorite subjects were the nightclubs, singers,… More>>
Braque, Georges
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