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Camille Lambert | Post Impressionist painter

Camille-Nicolas Lambert (1876-1963) was born in Arlon, Belgium in 1874. He was a student of the Académie des Beaux-Arts de Liége and Anvers.
He won the second place Prix de Rome in 1898, and third place Prix de Rome in 1901 and 1904. Lambert exhibited at the Salon des Artistes Français in Paris and the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels. He was a member of circle Pour l'Art, and he exhibited in 1912 at the 20th Salon.



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Danny Ferland, 1975 | Portrait painter

Danny Ferland was born in Quebec City, Quebec.
He was self taught for many years before discovering the magnificence of figurative art during a European trip in 2002.
Seeing the historical artworks in countless museums is what made him realize the outmost importance of genuine academic training.
In 2008 he moved to New York city after being accepted into the Janus Collaborative school of art.


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Rembrandt | The Return of the Prodigal Son, 1668

In the Gospel According to Luke (15: 11-32), Christ relates the parable of the Prodigal Son.
A son asks his father for his inheritance and leaves the parental home, only to fritter away all his wealth.
Arriving at last at sickness and poverty, he returns to his father's house. The old man is blinded by tears as he forgives his son, just as God forgives all those who repent.
This whole work is dominated by the idea of the victory of love, goodness and charity.
The event is treated as the highest act of human wisdom and spiritual nobility, and it takes place in absolute silence and stillness.


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Thomas Gainsborough | Rococo / Romantic painter

Tate, Britain / The portrait and landscape painter Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788)🎨 was born at Sudbury, Suffolk, the fifth son of a cloth merchant.
He was apprenticed at the age of thirteen to a London silversmith, and was taught by Hubert Gravelot, a French book-illustrator.
By 1745 he had established his own studio in London. He married Margaret Burr in 1746, and by 1748 had taken up residence in Suffolk.
He moved to Ipswich in 1752, and settled at Bath as a portraitist in 1759.
He took as an apprentice his nephew, Gainsborough Dupont (1754-97) in 1772.


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Thomas Gainsborough | The Mall in St. James Park, 1783 | Art in Detail

National Gallery, London / Thomas Gainsborough was, with Reynolds (his main rival), the leading portrait painter in England in the later 18th century. The feathery brushwork of his mature work and rich sense of colour contribute to the enduring popularity of his portraits. Unlike Reynolds, he avoids references to Italian Renaissance art or the Antique, and shows his sitters in fashionable contemporary dress.