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ART “4” “2”-DAY  11 February
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DEATHS: 1921 RICHMOND — 1879 DAUMIER
BIRTH:  1791 HAYEZ — 1881 CARRÀ
^ Born on 11 February 1791: Francesco Hayez, Italian historical painter and printmaker who died on 12 December 1882.
— Hayez was born in Venice. He studied under Maggiotto, and then at the Academy of Venice; after which he went to Rome, where he won the first prize from the Academy of Saint Luke. He afterwards then went to Milan where he was appointed a professor of the Academy. He painted frescoes in the Vatican in Rome, and Rinaldo and Armida for the Academy of Venice. Italy’s greatest exponent of historical Romantic painting, he was also greatly admired for his portraits. He played an important part in the cultural life of Italy during its emergence as a modern nation state. He died in Milan.
— The students of Hayez included Giuseppe Bertini, Filippo Carcano, Tranquillo Cremona, Domenico Induno.

LINKS
The Education of Achilles (1813; 600x768pix _ ZOOM to 1400x1792pix)
Odysseus in the Court of Alcinous (1813; 600x848pix _ ZOOM to 1400x1979pix)
Rinaldo and Armida (1813) — Crusaders Thirsting near Jerusalem (1846)
The Kiss (1859) _ a work which reveals the principal components of the style of the founder of Lombard Romanticism, i.e. the influence of the Venetian painting – in the sense of a harking back to sixteenth-century artists like Titian and Savoldo – and an abstraction of Purist derivation.
Alessandro Manzoni (118x92cm)
^ Died on 11 February 1921: William Blake Richmond, London English painter, sculptor, and designer, born on 19 (29?) November 1842.
Richmond self-portrait— Richmond [self~portrait >] was born in London, the son of a painter and Academician. His father was a great admirer of William Blake, the visionary, painter, and poet, hence naming his son in his honor. Richmond entered the RA Schools in 1858, where he was a contemporary and friend of Albert Moore.
      He was an accomplished portraitist, and throughout his life he had a considerable output of portraits of ’the great and the good.’ Like many other serious minded Victorian artists, he was not comfortable with being ‘merely’ a portrait painter. He traveled to Italy, therefore, to study great works of the Old Masters. Richmond painted large scale classical pictures following this visit. These works show the influence of Lord Leighton, in their high degree of finish, and father static nature. He was elected a Royal Academician in 1895. He lived well into the 20th century, when his art was deeply unfashionable.

— Richmond entered the Royal Academy schools in 1857 and exhibited there from 1861. As a painter he was active in three main fields: history painting (e.g. The Procession of Bacchus at the Time of the Vintage, 1869), portraiture, an area in which he was prolific, and landscape (e.g. Near Viareggio, 1876). His best-known portrait is The Sisters (1864), the daughters of Dean Liddell of Christ Church, Oxford. Richmond also designed and sculpted the monument to William Gladstone (1898) in Hawarden church, Clwyd.

— Richmond was born in London, the son of the painter George Richmond RA, a devotee of William Blake, who named his son after the artist. Richmond received a classical education, learning Latin and Greek, and also came under the instruction of John Ruskin, a friend of George Richmond. He entered the RA Schools in 1858 and was a keen student of drawing from the Antique. He was, however, dissatisfied with the teaching and left shortly afterwards. In 1859 he made his first visit to Italy, where he copied Giotto's frescoes in the Arena Chapel, Padua, and was influenced by the rich colors of Titian in Venice.
      Richmond's first RA exhibit in 1861 was a portrait group of his brothers, and portraiture continued to be a major part of his work throughout his life. His sitters included Darwin, Holman Hunt, Gladstone and Browning. Richmond was determined, however, to paint not only portraits, and therefore decided to return to Italy for a few years and also visited Algiers in 1870. Richmond began to paint high art subjects on a monumental scale and was also commissioned to paint frescoes and design mosaics for the ceiling of Saint Paul's Cathedral, 1891-4. Visits to Greece in 1882 and 1883 resulted in several epic classical works such as Venus and Anchises (1890) which combined classical forms and swirling drapery with minute attention to the details of plants and flowers. He was elected ARA 1888 and RA 1895.

— Sir William Blake Richmond, KCB RA, died on Friday 11 February 1921 at his home, Beavor Lodge, Hammersmith, aged 78. If heredity counts for anything in art, Sir William Richmond had every claim to be an artist, for not only was he the son of the distinguished portrait painter George Richmond RA [28 Mar 1809 – 19 Mar 1896], he was the grandson of Thomas Richmond, a prolific and successful miniature painter, whilst his grandmother was the daughter of George Engleheart [1750-1829], the contemporary and rival of Conway.
      Partly for reasons of health, he was educated privately; which as his parents were highly cultivated people and their house a center of artistic society, rather of the imaginative and even mystical type, meant that the boy was bred upon art and music. The household friends were men like Samuel Palmer and Edward Calvert, while over them all brooded the memory of William Blake, to walk with whom George Richmond used to say ‘was like walking with the Prophet Isaiah.
      After the friend of his father William Blake Richmond was named. In early boyhood he had a passion for music, but before he was 14 he had turned to drawing and entered the RA Schools. At this date he was much influenced by the group of Pre-Raphaelites, men several years older than himself and already coming to the front — Holman Hunt, Millais, and Burne-Jones — and perhaps still more by their great literary advocate John Ruskin.
      Partly stimulated by them, and partly by a first visit to Italy, he painted several pictures, chiefly illustrating poetical or classical legend, or Bible stories a class of work he preferred above all others, even when he had become, in the sixties and seventies, a favorite portrait painter.
      The pictures at which he worked hardest, and into which he put most of himself shown to the end of the century were such as The Death of Ulysses, The Song of Miriam, and best of all An Audience at Athens during the performance of Agamenmon.
      Several of the portraits are greatly admired, especially the Lady Hood, and the Andrew Long, and the beautiful Three Daughters of Dean Liddell, a work of about 1870. The picture of Long in particular is admirable, not only for its design and execution, but for its grasp of character.
      Richmond had many sitters amongst eminent men; Gladstone sat to him twice; he painted Darwin and Browning; and, in 1887, he went to Berlin and painted Prince Bismarck.
      At a later stage he was given the formidable commission to decorate Saint Paul’s Cathedral, and to this work for many years he gave his utmost energies. There were many who thought it a mistake to attempt such a colossal undertaking, seeing that it is quite uncertain that Wren ever contemplated anything of the kind for his great church, and seeing that mosaic decoration has never taken root in England, but Richmond was courageous enough to make the effort, filled as he was with Italian memories and Italian ideas. The work so far as it has gone, has been as much attacked as praised.
      Richmond’s solid reputation will rest rather on his portraits, often beautiful and always full of the truth of character, and upon some at least of his large ‘historical,’ or rather ideal pictures, of which The Audience at Athens has the most enduring merit.
      Sir William Richmond, who had known and loved Assisi well since 1868, when he spent a summer in that city, published in 1919 Assisi Impressions of Half A Century. In this book recollections of blissful days with his paint-box among the kindly friars and genial farm folk, mingle with his discourse on the upper and lower churches, and the hills and valleys of the neighborhood. A number of his own sketches reproduced in color, illustrate many of his reminiscences.
Photo of Richmond.

LINKS
Henry Dawson Greene [1862-1912] of Slyne and Whittington Hall [Child, Dog, Flowers] (76x122cm)
Mrs. Ernest Moon (1888, 127x102cm; 512x404pix, 30kb) _ Richmond is best remembered for his academic pictures, but like his father before him he was a highly gifted portraitist. Here he shows the contrasting colors and textures of opulent fabrics against the simple white of the woman’s dress. This, combined with the languid posture and expression of the sitter, creates a uniquely ‘aesthetic’ image. Contemporary critics also noted its affinities with the Italian Renaissance painter Bronzino. The sitter was Emma Moon, a young Australian who married an English barrister. This portrait celebrated their marriage, and she is shown wearing the richly decorated coat which she embroidered herself.
The Slave (1886, 91x53cm) _ Richmond's source for The Slave, and its meaning, remain obscure. Possibly it is connected to Orientalist depictions of captive women, a theme perhaps inspired by his visit to the Middle East in 1885.Sir William Blake Richmond was a painter of allegorical, mythological and religous subjects, as well as landscapes and portraits. He also made sculpture, and decorated the interior of Saint Paul's Cathedral. He was initially influenced by the Pre-Raphaelites, and knew Holman Hunt and Millais through his father, George Richmond. Richmond believed passionately in the necessity for serious subject matter in art, and the primacy of academic painting.
The Libyan Desert Sunset (1888, 29x40cm) _ pinkish brown almost-monochrome.
^ Born on 11 February 1881: Carlo Dalmazzo Carrà, Italian Futurist painter who died on 13 April 1966.
— Nel 1895 Carrà si trasferisce a Milano. Nel 1905 segue i corsi della Scuola serale d’arte applicata al Castello Sforzesco; l’anno seguente può iscriversi all’Accademia di Brera. Con Boccioni e Russolo, nel 1910 Carrà incontra Marinetti, aderisce alle istanze del futurismo e firma il Manifesto dei pittori futuristi [English translation], seguito poco più tardi dal Manifesto tecnico [English translation]. Dipinge allora I Funerali dell’Anarchico Galli, uno dei simboli del neonato movimento: nel febbraio del ‘12 espone quest’opera, accanto ad altre notissime, alla Galleria Bernheim Jeune a Parigi, in una mostra itinerante futurista che approda poi a Londra, Berlino, Bruxelles, Amsterdam. Chiamato alle armi, nel 1917 approda a Ferrara, dove conosce Savinio [Andrea de Chirico], il suo fratello Giorgio De Chirico e Filippo De Pisis [11 May 1896–1956].
      Nel 1919 Carrà torna nel capoluogo lombardo; avvia la collaborazione con Valori Plastici. Nel ‘21 scrive come critico d’arte su L’Ambrosiano. Nello stesso anno dipinge Il pino sul mare.
      Nel 1922 partecipa per la prima volta alla Biennale di Venezia. Nel 1926 Carrà partecipa di nuovo alla Biennale, alla I Mostra del Novecento Italiano e ad una mostra alla Galleria Pesaro. Due anni dopo, alla XVI Biennale veneziana, ottiene una sala personale con 14 opere.
      L’attività espositiva è molto intensa anche nel periodo successivo: nel ‘30 espone con Soffici alla Galleria Bardi di Milano; nel ‘31 allestisce una sala alla I Quadriennale Nazionale d’Arte romana, dove vince il 2° premio per la pittura.
      Fra il 1933 e il ‘38 Carrà è chiamato a realizzare pitture murali per grandi edifici pubblici, dal Palazzo dell’Arte - in occasione appunto della V Triennale d’arte - al Palazzo di Giustizia di Milano. Nel 1935 espone 46 opere in una importante personale alla Galleria del Milione. Nel 1941 assume la cattedra di pittura all’Accademia di Brera.
      Gli anni del dopoguerra sono dedicati anche alla pubblicazione di nuovi volumi critici. Nel 1948 Francesco Arcangeli cura una mostra antologica a Bologna. E’ vincitore del Gran Premio per un artista italiano alla Biennale di Venezia del 1950. Nel 1962 apre una grande mostra celebrativa della sua opera al Palazzo Reale di Milano.

LINKS
The Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1908) — Leaving the Theatre (1909)
I Funerali dell’Anarchico Galli (1911, 198x266cm) — Inverno sul lago
^ Died on 11 February 1808: Honoré-Victorin Daumier, prolific French caricaturist, painter, and sculptor, especially renowned for his cartoons and drawings satirizing 19th-century French politics and society. His paintings, though hardly known during his lifetime, helped introduce techniques of Impressionism into modern art. He was born on 20 (or 26) February 1808.
Louis-Philippe Gargantua—     In his lifetime he was known chiefly as a political and social satirist, but since his death recognition of his qualities as a painter has grown. In 1830, after learning the still fairly new process of lithography, he began to contribute political cartoons to the anti-government weekly La Caricature. He was an ardent Republican and was sentenced to six months' imprisonment in 1832 for his attacks on Louis-Philippe, whom he represented as `Gargantua swallowing bags of gold extorted from the people' [<<<]. On the suppression of political satire in 1835 he began to work for Charivari and turned to satire of social life, but at the time of the 1848 revolution he returned to political subjects. He is said to have made more than 4000 lithographs, wishing each time that the one he had just made could be his last. In the last years of his life he was almost blind and was saved from destitution by Corot.
     
Daumier's paintings were probably done for the most part fairly late in his career. Although he was accepted four times by the Salon, he never exhibited his paintings otherwise and they remained practically unknown up to the time of an exhibition held at Durand-Ruel's gallery in 1878, the year of his death. The paintings are in the main a documentation of contemporary life and manners with satirical overtones, although he also did a number featuring Don Quixote as a larger-than-life hero. His technique was remarkably broad and free. As a sculptor he specialized in caricature heads and figures, and these too are in a very spontaneous style. In particular he created the memorable figure of ‘Ratapoil’, who embodied the sinister agents of the government of Louis-Philippe. A similar political type in his graphic art was ‘Robert Macaire’, who personified the unscrupulous profiteer and swindler. In the directness of his vision and the lack of sentimentality with which he depicts current social life Daumier belongs to the Realist school of which Courbet was the chief representative. As a caricaturist he stands head and shoulders above all others of the 19th-century. He had the gift of expressing the whole character of a man through physiognomy, and the essence of his satire lay in his power to interpret mental folly in terms of physical absurdity. Although he never made a commercial success of his art, he was appreciated by the discriminating and numbered among his friends and admirers Delacroix, Corot, Forain, and Baudelaire. Degas was among the artists who collected his works.
— Prolific caricaturist, painter, lithographer and sculptor. Especially renowned for satirical cartoons and drawings of 19th-century French politics and society. His paintings, not widely known during his lifetime, helped introduce the techniques of Impressionism into modern art. The child of artists, received a typical lower middle-class education, but wanted to draw — his studies did not interest him. Thus his family placed him with an old and fairly well-known artist, Alexandre Lenoir. Lenoir, student and friend of Jacques-Louis David, was more aesthetician than painter. He had a pronounced taste for Rubens, one of whose works he owned himself. A collector of sculpture, he had preserved the most beautiful medieval and contemporary sculptures from the Revolutionaries, which interested Daumier. At 13 Daumier to seek paid employment when his father suffered a mental breakdown. Honoré Daumier first served as a messenger boy for a bailiff and, through experience, acquired familiarity with the world of law courts He also worked as a bookseller's clerk at the Palais-Royal, one of the busiest spots in Paris. There Daumier saw, from his employer's window, all characters of the Comédie humaine whom he would later discuss with his friend Balzac: not only men and women of fashion, intellectuals, and artists, but also "captains of industry," or swindlers, as they were more often called — all of whom lent themselves to caricature. In about 1825-28, Daumier decided to embark on the artistic career of which he had always dreamed. He was a young man of about 18 or 20, from a family of painters, had had an opportunity to admire Rubens, had learned to analyze sculpture, and finally had spent time observing the appearance and behavior of different classes of French society. Unable to earn a living from painting or sculpture, he accepted commissions for lithographs — portraits and cartoons of “caricatures de moeurs”.
— Daumier began work as a graphic artist, having learnt lithography techniques in 1830, and been employed on Charivari and La Caricature (1830-35) until the latter's suppression by the government. He was imprisoned in 1832 for his anti-monarchical satire of Louis Philippe as Gargantua and during the course of his life he produced over 4000 lithographs of political and social comment, including large scale works (e.g. Rue Transnonian le 15 Avril 1834).
      After 1848, he produced watercolors which continued this vein, parodying the Courts of Justice, and depicting the existence of the poor. He created two memorable characters in Robert Macaire, the corrupt and money obsessed bourgeois, and Ratapoil (skinned rat), the sinister government agent.
      He also experimented with oils including several on the theme of Don Quixote, although many of his pictures remained unfinished, producing loosely handled, thickly impasto works of strong chiaroscuro (e.g. Third Class Carriage).
      He also produced sculpture which showed the same roughness of handling and concern for social issues (e.g. Ratapoil, bronze, 1851, Buffalo, Albright-Knox Art Gallery; Refugees, bronze relief, 1850, Washington, DC).
      Daumier became blind in old age, and was rescued from poverty by Corot, who was one of his many artistic admirers. Degas collected his work which was appreciated by Delacroix and Baudelaire as well as, perhaps not surprisingly, Balzac. He was also greatly admired by the 20th century Expressionists, who applauded both his radical stance and the freedom with which he used materials."

LINKS
Wagon de 3ème Classe (1858, 26x34cm; 4/5 size, 165kb) _ Wagon de 3ème Classe (1865, 65x90cm; 662x931pix, 150kb) _ Honoré Daumier was deeply interested in people, especially the underprivileged. In Third-class Carriage he shows us, with great compassion, a group of people on a train journey. We are especially concerned with one family group, the young mother tenderly holding her small child, the weary grandmother lost in her own thoughts, and the young boy fast asleep. The painting is done with simple power and economy of line. The hands, for example, are reduced to mere outlines but beautifully drawn. The bodies are as solid as clay, their bulk indicated by stressing the essential and avoiding the nonessential. These are not portraits of particular people but of mankind.
Pauvres moutons ah! vous avez beau faire Toujours on vous tondra (1830; 226kb) _ #18 of the series Caricatures Politiques.
En 1864 au Château La Mission Haut Brion - Grand Premier Crû (color lithograph, 23x24cm; full size, 225kb) bestial-faced wine drinker.
La cour du roi Pétaud (colored lithograph 28x54cm; 4/5 size, 226kb) published in La Caricature, 23 August 1832.
Le Meunier, son Fils, et l'Âne (600x440pix _ ZOOM to 1400x1027pix)
Le Fardeau (1853; 600x500pix _ ZOOM to 1400x1167pix) _ aka in another version as La Lavandière (600x384pix _ ZOOM to 1400x896pix)
Daumier - Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco - directory of 538 images (zoomable to huge oversize).
Daumier (1808-1879) - Over a hundred prints at the University of Montana Museum of Fine Arts.
Daumier - Australian National University - View a survey of enlargeable prints which showcase the caricaturist's sharp and satirical pen with respect to situations and facial expressions.
Daumier - Boston College - View Jeffery Howe's photos of two sculptures, each a bust of a legislator, that show that Daumier's satirical style was not limited to lithographs.
Daumier - Encyclopedia.com - Read a brief biography.
Daumier - J. Paul Getty Museum - Profile accompanied by an image of the watercolor called A Criminal Case.
Daumier - La Caricature, 1832 - View the satirical drawing of King Louis-Philipe for which the Daumier was sentenced to serve six months in prison at Ste-Pelagie. With details.
Daumier - MSN Encarta - Read the article. Follow selected links to view examples of Daumier's work.
Daumier - Musée d'Orsay - Profile focuses on Daumier's technique for modeling caricatures in clay. View an image of a bust.
Daumier - National Gallery of Art - Link to an extensive biography, including a bibliography, as well as images of paintings and numerous drawings.
Daumier - Norton Simon Museum - Painting Mountebanks Resting and text about Daumier's switch from caricatures to oils.
Daumier - U. of Michigan SILS Art Image Browser - 16 thumbnail images of lithographs to enlarge for viewing.
Daumier - UM Missoula, Museum of Fine Arts - Directory for the print collection offers links to more than 100 lithographs.
Daumier - University of Brighton, UK - Course in narrative art presents the Daumier's perspective on politics, among other societal ills. Includes his captions.
Daumier - University of California, Berkeley - Press release about an exhibition of 50 lithographs offers a biography and a description of the prints.
Daumier - WebMuseum - Comments on Daumiers paintings and offers eight of them for viewing.

Died on a 11 February:

1949 (12 Feb?) Christian Bérard, Parisian painter and stage designer born on 20 August 1902. He attended the Académie Ranson from 1920 (under Vuillard and Denis) and first exhibited at the Galerie Druet in 1924, as part of the group orchestrated by the critic Waldemar George. These ‘Neo-Romantics’ or ‘Neo-Humanists’ included Eugène Berman and Pavel Tchelitchew; at this point their eclectic, self-consciously traditional art offered an important alternative to modernism. Pittura Metafisica interiors provided one exemplar, yet Bérard’s dark-toned moody portraits, such as Pierre Colle (1931), also suggest the directness of 17th-century realism, and in 1934 he painted a Homage to Le Nain.

^ 1832 Jean-Antoine Laurent, French painter born on 31 October 1763. A student of Jean-François Durand [1731 – >1778] in Nancy and later of the miniature painter J.-B. Augustin in Paris (1785–1786), he began his career as a porcelain and miniature painter. In the latter capacity he exhibited in the Salon between 1791 and 1800, after which he gave up miniatures in favour of small genre paintings, which he exhibited regularly until 1831. In 1806 he received a Prix d’Encouragement and in 1808 a first-class medal. In 1804, when he showed Woman Playing the Lute, he was hailed by Vivant Denon as a painter of ‘very delicate and very distinguished talent’ and as worthy of comparison with Gerrit Dou, Willem van Mieris, and Gerard ter Borch II. Laurent was highly regarded by the Empress Josephine, who bought six paintings from him between 1804 and 1812. In her home at Malmaison there was a small full-length portrait of The Empress Josephine (1806), by Laurent, which owed much to his training as a miniaturist. — Portrait of a Young Woman (1795, ivory pendant; octagonal, 6x7cm) [dressed as a man, looks like a young man, with a dog]

^ 1830 Johann Baptist (or Giovanni Battista, Giambatista) Lampi I, in Vienna, artist active in Austria, Italy, Poland, and Russia, born on 31 December 1751 in Austrian South Tyrol (now under Italian rule). He was the youngest son among the 14 children of Matthias Lampi [1698–1780], a minor church and decorative painter, and his wife, Klara Margarete Lorenzoni. After early training by his father, he went to Salzburg (1768–1870) to study under his uncle Peter Anton Lorenzoni [1721–1782], who painted altarpieces. In Salzburg he probably also received instruction in historical and portrait painting from Franz Xaver König [1711–1782] and Franz Nikolaus Streicher [1738–1811]. Between 1770 and 1773 he studied in Verona under Francesco Lorenzi [1723–1787], a student of Giambattista Tiepolo. Lampi became a member of the Accademia di Belle Arti in Verona in 1773; during this time he painted several works for churches in the Verona–Trento area and also painted frescoes, for example the ceiling (1772) of the Assunta in Romeno. Influenced at first by the late Baroque style of the Tiepolo school, Lampi gradually began to adopt a classicizing approach, as in the altarpiece Christ on the Cross (1779). However, his work was inclined to be dry and academic, and his only successful religious picture, with its simplified forms and subdued coloring, is the Dead Christ (1779).
     Of his three sons and four daughters, Johann Baptist Lampi II [04 Mar 1775 – 17 Feb 1837] and Franz Xaver Lampi [22 Jan 1782 – 22 Jul 1852] were the most important artists. Johann Baptist the younger followed in his father’s footsteps as a portrait painter, and his style is often indistinguishable from the latter’s. Franz Xaver is also noted as a portrait painter. Johann Baptist Matthias Edler von Lampi [1807–1857], the son of Johann Baptist the younger, was a painter working in Vienna. — Besides his children, JB Lampi I had among his students Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, Eustatie Altini, Vladimir Borovikovsky, Franz Eybl, Peter Fendi.

1688 Cesare Gennari, Italian painter born on 12 October 1637. With his brother Benedetto Gennari II [bapt. 19 Oct 1633 – 09 Dec 1715] he ran Guercino's studio after the death of Guercino, with whom they and others of their family had worked. Cesare’s Penitent Magdalene (1662) is characteristic of his accomplished style.


Born on a 11 February:


1909 Gustave Singier, French painter and stage designer of Belgian birth, who died in 1984. — [Singer he was not, but Singier] — [Qui voudrait singer Singier devrait trouver des exemples de ses chefs-d'oeuvres, ce qui n'est pas mon cas.] — He moved with his family to Paris in 1919 and began to paint at the age of 14, studying for four years at the École Boulle. Until 1936 he worked as a designer–decorator on installations of shops and apartments while continuing to paint from nature and to copy Old Master paintings in the Louvre. The French painter Charles Walch (1896–1948), whom he met in 1936, gave him advice and helped to initiate him in more avant-garde forms of art. He began to exhibit in the Salons and commercial galleries in 1936 and in 1941 was included in the exhibition Vingt peintres de tradition française at the Galerie Braun, which brought together many of the leading French painters of the younger generation. He was one of the founders of the Salon de Mai in 1945, but his first one-man exhibition was not until 1949, at the Galerie Billet-Caputo.

^ 1876 Harold Gilman, English painter who died on 12 February 1919. He developed an interest in art as a boy, during a period of convalescence. He spent a year at the University of Oxford, but left on account of his health to work as a tutor with an English family in Odessa. On his return in 1896 he attended Hastings School of Art and then the Slade School of Fine Art, London (1897–1901). Afterwards he spent over a year in Spain, copying paintings by Velázquez in the Prado. He also married an American painter, Grace Canedy, whom he met in Madrid. They settled in London, but after the birth of a daughter made a long visit to Canedy’s family in Chicago where a second daughter was born and Gilman came under pressure to join his father-in-law’s business. — LINKS

1872 Christian J. Walter, US artist who died in 1938. — Relative? of Martha Walter [1880-1976] ?

^ 1855 Erik Theodor Werenskiold, Norwegian painter, draftsman, and printmaker, who died on 23 November 1938. He studied in Christiania (later Kristiania, now Oslo) in 1873–5 under Julius Middelthun, who discovered his unusual gift for drawing, and then at the Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Munich (1876–9). Among his early paintings, Female Half-nude (1877; Bergen, Billedgal.) is typical in revealing an interest in individual personality and psychology even in a traditional academic subject. In 1878, while on a visit to Kristiania, Werenskiold met the collector and editor Peter Christien Asbjørnsen (1812–85) and was engaged as an illustrator for his new edition of Norwegian fairy tales (Kristiania, 1879). Together with Theodor Kittelsen, he continued to contribute illustrations to Absjørnsen’s publications. In his drawings for tales such as De Kongsdøtre i berget det blå (‘The three princesses in the mountain-in-the-blue’; Kristiania, 1887), he achieved a striking combination of realistic observation, fantasy and humour, his imaginary creatures being especially successful. During the 1880s Werenskiold was also active as a painter. He left Munich early in 1881 and settled in Paris where he came to know the work of contemporary French artists. He was initially intrigued by both Naturalism and Impressionism, but eventually found it impossible to abandon the feeling for form and line that he sensed as lacking in these styles. In 1883 he returned to Norway and soon became the chief promotor of a strictly national art, based on the study of Norwegian landscape and folk life. Girls of Telemark (1883; Oslo, N.G., see fig.) and Peasant Burial (1885; Oslo, N.G.) are naturalistically detailed studies of Norwegian daily life. At this time Werenskiold began his long series of portraits representing outstanding compatriots that eventually included Edvard Grieg (1892) and Henrik Ibsen (1895). — Halfdan Egedius and Harald Oskar Egedius were students of Werenskiold.

1841 (01 Feb?) Józef Brandt, Polish painter who died on 12 June 1915. From 1858 he was in Paris, registered as a student of engineering at the Ecole des Ponts et Chaussées, but from 1859 he studied painting under the guidance of the Polish artist Juliusz Fortunat Kossak and also took instruction from Henryk Rodakowski and worked briefly with Léon Cogniet. In 1860 Brandt returned to Poland with Kossak, and the two artists travelled to the Ukraine and Podole: the beauty of the eastern borderlands made a lasting impression on Brandt, and this region became the chief setting for his paintings. Until 1862 Brandt remained largely under Kossak’s influence, both in his subject-matter (drawn largely from the 17th-century military and hunting life of the borderlands) and in his colouring and technique, especially in his watercolors. In 1861 Brandt exhibited a series of drawings and watercolour sketches in Warsaw at the Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts, drawing his subjects from patriotic literature, and his work was well-received by the public.

1819 Augustus Knip, Dutch painter and lithographer, who died in 1860; son of Josephus Augustus Knip [03 Aug 1777 – 01 Oct 1847]. A student of his father, he painted mostly barn interiors and landscapes with cattle and was also active as a lithographer. He made use of his father’s portfolio for his oil paintings and worked in collaboration with his sister Henriëtte Ronner-Knip [31 May 1821 – 02 Mar 1909]. A typical work is his View of Arnhem and Cleves (1847).

1746 Luis Paret y Alcázar, Madrid Spanish painter who died on 14 February 1799. His father was a Frenchman of Catalan descent, and his mother was Spanish. He trained in Madrid, first with the French jeweller Augustin Duflos (fl 1722–1767) and then with the Trinitarian friar Bartolomé de San Antonio [1708–1782], uncle of the architect Ventura Rodríguez. Paret studied for four years at the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de S Fernando and with the patronage of the Infante Luis Antonio Bourbon, the brother of Charles III, went to Rome in 1763, where he completed his artistic training. On his return to Madrid in 1766, he won prizes at the Academia and probably visited France or studied contemporary French art under the guidance of Charles de La Traverse, who was a former student of François Boucher and who was in Madrid at that time.

1721 Friedrich Wilhelm Hirt, German artist who died on 19 January 1772. — [Was Hirt hurt when people neglected his masterpieces, as the Internet seems to be doing? If he were alive today, this surely would make him turn over in his grave.]

1637 Jacob van Oost II, in Bruges, Flemish portrait and religious painter who died on 29 September 1713; son and student of Jacob van Oost I [bapt. 01 Jul 1601 – 1671]. Jacob II settled in Lille.
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