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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, etcher, lithographer,
and sculptor. He was immense1y successful with his trite and nigglingly
detailed historical paintings and historical genre pieces (particularly
scenes from the Napoleonic campaigns) and from the 1840s received the
highest official honours, including the Grand Cross of the Legion of
Honour - he was the first painter to win this award. Astonishingly conceited
as well as mean-spirited, he cultivated a huge white beard and liked
to be photographed or painted in attitudes of fiercely profound thought,
as in his self-portrait of 1889 in the Musée d'Orsay. He had
a personal enmity for Courbet and may have been instrumental in inducing
the government to impose a fine on him after the suppression of the
Commune. Meissonier did his best work when he was at his least pretentious.
His landscapes are attractive descriptive exercises and his Rue de la
Martellerie (Musée d'Orsay, Paris, 1848), which shows a corpse-strewn
street during the revolutionary events of 1848, has genuine pathos and
impressed Delacroix. There are large collections of Meissonier's work
in the Musée d'Orsay and in the Wallace Collection, London.
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