Alma Tadema
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8 January 1836 – 25 June 1912. Most renowned painters.

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HOUCKGEEST, Gerard
New Church in Delft with the Tomb of Willem the Silent g

ID: 07642

HOUCKGEEST, Gerard New Church in Delft with the Tomb of Willem the Silent g
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HOUCKGEEST, Gerard New Church in Delft with the Tomb of Willem the Silent g


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HOUCKGEEST, Gerard

Dutch Baroque Era Painter, ca.1600-1661  Related Paintings of HOUCKGEEST, Gerard :. | Irises, 1914-17 | The Road Menders (nn04) | Portrat des Sir Endimion Porter und Selbstportrat Anthonis van Dyck | The Hunter and a Woman | Lilac trees |
Related Artists:
Hiroshige, Ando
Japanese Ukiyo-e Printmaker, 1797-1858 Japanese painter and printmaker. He was one of the greatest and most prolific masters of the full-colour landscape print and one of the last great ukiyoe ('pictures of the floating world') print designers
Adrian Ludwig Richter
German, 1803-1884 German painter, printmaker and illustrator. He ranks with Moritz von Schwind as the most important representative of late Romantic painting and printmaking in Germany. In contrast to the work of such leading masters of early Romanticism as Philipp Otto Runge and Caspar David Friedrich, which was ambitious in content and innovative in form, Richter's art was more modest in its aims, in line with the restrained intellectual climate of the Biedermeier period.
Henry Wallis
British 1830-1916 1916). English painter, writer and collector. He first studied at F. S. Cary academy and in 1848 entered the Royal Academy Schools, London. He is also thought to have trained in Paris at some time in the late 1840s or early 1850s, first in Charles Gleyre atelier and subsequently at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. He specialized in portraits of literary figures and scenes from the lives of past writers, as in Dr Johnson at Cave, the Publisher (1854; untraced). His first great success was the Death of Chatterton (London, Tate), which he exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1856. The impoverished late 18th-century poet Thomas Chatterton, who while still in his teens had poisoned himself in despair, was a romantic hero for many young and struggling artists in Wallis day. He depicted the poet dead in his London garret, the floor strewn with torn fragments of manuscript and, tellingly, an empty phial near his hand. The painting was universally praised, not least by John Ruskin who described it as faultless and wonderful, advising visitors to examine it well, inch by inch. Although Wallis was only loosely connected with the Pre-Raphaelite movement, his method and style in Chatterton reveal the importance of that connection: the vibrant colours and careful build-up of symbolic detail are typical Pre-Raphaelite concerns. The success of Chatterton was such that, when exhibited in Manchester the following year, it was protected from the jostling crowds by a policeman. It was bought by another artist, Augustus






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