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Virginie Augustin (1973–), comics and animated features artist; Jean-François Batellier (1974–), caricaturist and cartoonist; Abdelkader Benchamma (1975–), drawings, sculptor; Morgane Tschiember (1976–), sculptor, video artist; Y Liver (1977–) (lives and works in Paris), video maker and performance artists; Aude Massot (1983 ...
Lieutenant Thomas Eugene "Tom" Paris is a fictional character in the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager and is portrayed by Robert Duncan McNeill. Paris is the chief helmsman, as well as a temporary auxiliary medic, of the USS Voyager , a Starfleet ship that was stranded in the Delta Quadrant by an alien entity known ...
Edmund Thomas Parris (3 June 1793 – 27 November 1873) was an English history, portrait, subject, and panorama painter, book illustrator, designer and art restorer. He was appointed history painter to Queen Adelaide , Queen Consort of William IV, and painted Queen Victoria 's coronation in 1838 and the Duke of Wellington 's funeral in 1852.
Portrait of Sir Thomas More, by Hans Holbein the Younger Mona Lisa , by Leonardo da Vinci (edited by Derrick Coetzee ) Sri Shanmukaha Subramania Swami at Kartikeya , by Raja Ravi Varma
The Catalog of paintings in the Louvre Museum lists the painters of the collection of the Louvre Museum as they are catalogued in the Joconde database. The collection contains roughly 5,500 paintings by 1,400 artists born before 1900, and over 500 named artists are French by birth.
Eugène Carrière – 86 paintings including The Painting Family, The Sick Child, Intimacy; Mary Cassatt – 1 painting; Paul Cézanne – 56 paintings including Apples and Oranges, The Hanged Man's House, The Card Players, Portrait of Gustave Geffroy; Théodore Chassériau – 5 paintings (the main collection of his paintings is in the Louvre)
The painting represents an imaginary scene of a contemporary scientific demonstration, based on real life, and depicts the eminent French neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot (1825–1893) delivering a clinical lecture and demonstration at the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital in Paris (the room in which these demonstrations took place no longer exists at the Salpêtrière).
The Romans in their Decadence was one of the two most critically successful works to be exhibited at the salon that year, alongside Woman Bitten by a Serpent.Renowned critic Théophile Gautier compared the realism of the painting to styles practiced in Northern Europe at the time rather than Couture's native France, [6] while Edmond Texier praised aspects of the work but ultimately considered ...