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ART “4” “2”-DAY  31 January
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DEATHS: 1891 MEISSONIER — 1635 DUYSTER
1814Died on 31 January 1891: Jean Louis Ernest Meissonier, French artist born on 21 February 1815. — 1830s Earning a livelihood as a book illustrator with Tony Johannot 1834 Salon debut 1838 Marries Jenny Steinheil 1859 Commissioned to paint the Battle of Solferino 1861 Elected to the Académie des Beaux-Arts 1870s Serves as president of the Institut de France 1870s Serves as president of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts 1888 Jenny dies in June 1889 Is the first artist to receive the Grand Cross of the Légion d'Honneur 1890 Marries Mlle Bezançon

LINKS

Joueurs d'Échecs
La Campagne de France
Le Général Desaix et le Paysan.

1814 (1862, 32x24cm) [shown here >] _ After accompanying the French army in the Austro-Italian War of 1859, Meissonier abandoned the small Dutch 17th-century genre subjects for which he had become known and turned with even greater success to depicting events in the career of Napoléon I. In this small painting commissioned by the subject's nephew, Prince Napoléon, the emperor is portrayed in a forbidding landscape just after his last, hard-won victory in the 1814 French campaign, which was fought at Arcis-sur-Aube, near Troyes: 23'000 French troops withstood the onslaught of 90'000 Austrians, but were unable to capitalize on their victory
^ Died on 31 January 1635: Willem Corneliszoon Duyster, Dutch painter of genre scenes and portraits born in 1599. — [Why a Y in his name? you ask. Simple: without it, he'd be a Duster, buster, without any luster, and that wouldn't pass muster.]
— Duyster was active mainly in his native Amsterdam. Most of his paintings depict soldiers, sometimes in action, but more usually drinking, gaming, or wooing. His delicate skill at painting textiles, his ability to characterize individuals, and his power to express subtle psychological relationships between them, suggest that if he had not been carried off by the plague in his mid 30s he might well have rivalled Terborch.
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Soldiers beside a Fireplace (1632) _ During the second quarter of the 17th century a group of artists began to specialize in painting the life of soldiers. Scenes of plunder and battle were depicted but the ancient battle of sexes, where the field of action was a room in an inn or a barrack, and in which the outcome of the struggle is not much in doubt, was more frequently represented. Other popular subjects were soldiers drinking, smoking and gambling at cards or tric-trac, activities that contemporary predicants and moralists condemned as vices that endanger salvation. But it is doubtful if the painters of these scenes and their clients viewed them as pictorial reminders of the perils of sin and the inexorable need to lead a virtuous life. Pictures of the life of off-duty soldiers were called by the Dutch 'cortegaardjes' a corruption of the French term 'corps de garde'. The better ones show little movement or overt action. Painters of them had a special feeling for tonal values and their pictures take on a certain still-life quality. In their half-dark interiors the light glitters over uniforms, and a fine subdued play of colours, mostly broken and harmonized by delicate half-tones, betrays the Dutch gift for intimate pictorial qualities and a subtle rendering of textures. Some even anticipate the achievement of the high society painters of the following generation, when well-to-do burghers rather than soldiers and their friends became the favoured subject of genre painters. Specialists in this category worked in Amsterdam, Utrecht, Delft, but seldom in Haarlem. The leading ones in Amsterdam were Willem Duyster and Pieter Codde. What sets Duyster's rare pictures apart from those made by his contemporaries is his distinct chiaroscuro and the refinement of his colors. He was also better able than any of them to convey the fascinating visual drama which can take place when people do little more than confront each other. It is difficult to think of a painter of his time who surpasses his penetrating characterization of the personalities of the men gathered round a fireplace in the modest nocturnal scene in the Soldiers beside a Fireplace. There are other versions of the same. Duyster's approach is always original. His cortegaardjes and small pictures of dignified full-length single figures seen against dark backgrounds served as one of the points of departure for Terborch's great accomplishment in these branch of painting.
The Marauders

Died on a 31 January:
1977 Henri-Victor Wolvens (or Wolvenspergens), Belgian artist born on 06 June 1896.
1960 Auguste Herbin, French artist born on 29 April 1882. — Composition (1953, 47x32cm).
1914 René Pierre Charles Princeteau, French artist born in 1843 or 1844.
1904 Luc Raphaël Ponson, French artist born on 12 May 1835. — [Pensons où sont Ponson et son pont... ou est-ce qu'il n'a peint point de pont?]
1894 Gourlay Steell, Scottish artist born on 22 March 1819. [He had a will of Steell]
1686 Johannes-Antonius van der Baren
, Flemish artist born in 1616.
1669 Anthony van Ravesteyn, Dutch artist born in 1580.

Born on a 31 January:
1881 Max Hermann Pechstein, German Expressionist painter who died on 25 June 1955. — Painter and printmaker who was a leading member of the group of German Expressionist artists known as Die Brücke. Best known for his paintings of nudes and landscapes. — LINKSBathers (1917) — Flute Playing in the Country (1908)
1878 Pio Semeghini, Italian artist who died in 1964.
1824 Willem Vester, Dutch artist who died in July 1871.
1736 Vincent Jans van der Vinne, Dutch artist who died on 15 January 1811. — Relative? of Jacob Laurenszoon van der Vinne (23 Jun 1688 – 17 Jan 1737)? [If either vas really a vinne, vhy isn't there any sample of his vork in the vorld vide veb?]
1735 T. Kettle, British artist who died in 1786. [OK, OK, so the first name is Tilly.] — LINKS

Prussian blueHappened on a 31 January:

2003 The US Food and Drug Administration determines that Prussian blue (ferric hexacyanoferrate) [sample >] swallowed in a 500-mg capsule, can reduce by half the time the body takes to eliminate radioactive cesium and thallium, which might be used in a radiation-spreading bomb. Prussian blue is the first modern, artificially manufactured color. It was first made by the colormaker Diesbach of Berlin in about 1704. Diesbach accidentally formed the blue pigment when experimenting with the oxidation of iron. Dutch painter Simon Eikenlenberg wrote on the knowledge of Prussian blue in his Notes on Paint and Painting in 1722. By 1724 the manufacturing process of the pigment had spread to England and appeared in an artists' manual by Woodard. In The Handmaid to the Artists, Dossie quoted the preparation of Prussian blue in its entirety in 1764. The pigment has been extremely popular until 1970 when it was largely replaced by another pigment, phthaloryanine blue. Prussian blue has been used by Pablo Picasso [1881-1973], Christen Købke [1810-1848], Albert Bierstadt [1830-1902], Giovanni Antonio Canal [1697-1768], Antoine Watteau [1684-1721], William Hogarth [1697-1764], Thomas Bardwell [1704 – 09 Sep 1767], and William Blake [1757-1827], just to name a few. The original name of the pigment came from its use as a dye in the Prussian Army uniforms. The generic name is iron blue. Iron blue has a variety of hues due to the different processes of manufacture. Some of its commonly used names include Hamburg Blue, Paris Blue, bronze blue, celestial blue, cyanine, Haarlem blue, oriental blue, and potash blue. The chemical formula is Fe[Fe3+Fe2+(CN)6]3.

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