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CONDITION:
Clear and sharp with beautiful detail. As scanned.
Blank on the back. Heavier paper. This beautiful print would look great
matted and framed. Or an art supply store can provide you with a selection
of frames for old art treasures.
BIOGRAPHY - French painter and art theorist, the
dominant artist of Louis XIV's reign. After training with Vouet he went
to Rome in 1642 and worked under Poussin, becoming a convert to the
latter's theories of art. He returned to Paris in 1646. In 1662 he was
raised to nobility and named 'Premier Peintre du roi', and in 1663 he
was made director of the reorganized Gobelins factory. Also in 1663
he was made director of the reorganized Académie, which he turned
into a channel for imposing a codified system of orthodoxy in matters
of art. His lectures came to be accepted as providing the official standards
of artistic correctness and, formulated on the basis of the classicism
of Poussin, gave authority to the view that every aspect of artistic
creation can be reduced to teachable rule and precept. In 1698 his small
illustrated treatise 'Méthode pour apprendre à dessiner
les passions' was posthumously published; in this, again, following
theories of Poussin, he purported to codify the visual expression of
the emotions in painting. Despite the classicism of his theories, Le
Brun's own talents lay rather in the direction of flamboyant and grandiose
decorative effects. Among the most outstanding of his works for the
king were the Galerie d'Apollon at the Louvre (1663), and the famous
Galerie des Glaces (1679-84) and the Great Staircase (1671-78, destroyed
in 1752) at Versailles. His importance in the history of French art
is twofold: his contributions to the magnificence of the Grand Manner
of Louis XIV and his influence in laying the basis of academicism. Many
of the leading French artists of the next generation trained in his
studio. Le Brun was a fine portraitist and an extremely prolific draughtsman.
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