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“..Claude’s ability to translate his vision of the countryside and the majesty of natural light with the aid of his brush won him the admiration of his ...
17.5 x 25.1 cm. (6.9 x 9.9 in.) ...
Without the 17th century Lorrainese artist, Claude Lorrain, that most quintessentially ... itself which is so extraordinary. The pair of Pastoral Landscape with the Arch of Titus and Coast Scene ...
Claude Lorrain’s “Pastoral Landscape” (1628-1630) is, no escaping the fact, a landscape. At this point, like any other lifelong art lover, I’ve seen thousands upon thousands of landscapes.
This chart shows whether Claude Lorrain’s total sales are going up, and if so, whether this is because more artworks by the artist have been offered and sold or because more high-value artworks have ...
It is in this that Claude, by no means the first of landscape painters, led the way from its use as background, both decorative and dramatic, to its independence as a poetic subject, pastoral ...
Take this picture by Claude Lorrain ... and the landscape dramatises this, putting a ravine between them. A wide bank thrusts in with the huntsmen; the narrow opposite bank backs up defensively ...
Claude Lorrain's 'Coastal landscape ... In one painting in the Ashmolean show, Pastoral Landscape with the Arch of Titus, Lorrain takes a cheeringly free approach to classical archaeology ...
View of the Campagna by Claude Lorrain. But there is, I think, one missing link that is easy to overlook, and that is the influence of ancient landscape painting. This is a rather elusive subject ...
Italianate landscape with a drover and his dog driving his cattle across a ford, a waterfall beyond,
Röthlisberger, Claude Lorrain, The Paintings, London 1961 ... The painting may well have been executed in the same year as the small Pastoral Landscape in the Ellesmere Collection, which is comparable ...
the miniaturised Claudian landscapes created at Rousham by 18th-century landscape gardener William Kent still readily evoked the pastoral paintings of Claude Lorrain. The only thing missing from ...
SMB The 17th-century master Claude Lorrain, who spent most of his life in Rome, is not a household name today — even if he is enshrined in art history as the father of European landscape ...
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