Albert Bierstadt
Albert Bierstadt's Oil Paintings
Albert Bierstadt Museum
Jan 8, 1830 - Feb 18, 1902. German-American painter.

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Benjamin Marshall
A Celebrated spaniel,the property of colonel joliffe,in a landscape with a woodcock

ID: 37831

Benjamin Marshall A Celebrated spaniel,the property of colonel joliffe,in a landscape with a woodcock
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Benjamin Marshall A Celebrated spaniel,the property of colonel joliffe,in a landscape with a woodcock


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Benjamin Marshall

1767-1835 British Benjamin Marshall Gallery was an English sporting and animal painter. He was a follower of George Stubbs and studied under Lemuel Abbott for a short period of time. After 1792, he began painting animals, settling at Newmarket in 1812 near the racetrack. He returned to London in 1825 and died in 1835.  Related Paintings of Benjamin Marshall :. | A Golden Chestnut Racehorse by a Rock Formation With a Town Beyond | Francis Dukinfield Astley and his Harriers | Emilius | Curricle with a Huntsman (mk25) | The Mock Election (mk25) |
Related Artists:
Amadeo Preziosi
Italian Painter, 1816-1882
Matthias van Helmont
Antwerp1623-after1679 Brussels
Osbert, Alphonse
French Symbolist Painter, 1857-1939 French painter. He studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and in the studios of Henri Lehmann, Fernand Cormon and L?on Bonnat. His Salon entry in 1880, Portrait of M. O. (untraced), reflected his early attraction to the realist tradition of Spanish 17th-century painting. The impact of Impressionism encouraged him to lighten his palette and paint landscapes en plein air, such as In the Fields of Eragny (1888; Paris, Y. Osbert priv. col.). By the end of the 1880s he had cultivated the friendship of several Symbolist poets and the painter Puvis de Chavannes, which caused him to forsake his naturalistic approach and to adopt the aesthetic idealism of poetic painting. Abandoning subjects drawn from daily life, Osbert aimed to convey inner visions and developed a set of pictorial symbols. Inspired by Puvis, he simplified landscape forms, which served as backgrounds for static, isolated figures dissolved in mysterious light. A pointillist technique, borrowed from Seurat, a friend from Lehmann's studio, dematerialized forms and added luminosity. However, Osbert eschewed the Divisionists' full range of hues in his choice of blues, violets, yellows and silvery green. Osbert's mysticism is seen in his large painting Vision






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