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Georges Lemmen | Neo-Impressionist painter


Georges Lemmen (1865-1916) was a neo-impressionist painter from Belgium.
He was a member of Les XX from 1888.
His works include The Beach at Heist, Aline Marechal and Vase of Flowers.
Yvonne Serruys studied in his workshop in Brussels from 1892 to 1894.

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Donna N. Schuster | Modern impressionisi painter


Donna N. Schuster (born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin 1883) was an easel painter who created work in the style of modern impressionism using the medium of oil and watercolor.
She focused her work in Wisconsin then later moved to Los Angeles, California where she died in 1953.
Schuster got her education at the Art Institute of Chicago, then later attended Boston Museum School along with Edmund C. Tarbell and Frank W. Benson.

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E. Charlton Fortune | Impressionist painter


Euphemia Charlton Fortune (1885-1969) was an American Impressionist artist from California.
She was trained in Europe, New York and San Francisco.
She painted many portraits as well as landscape views of California and European sites.
In midlife she turned to liturgical design. She signed her paintings "E. Charlton Fortune", which helped conceal her gender.

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Eleuterio Pagliano | Romantic /genre painter


Eleuterio Pagliano (1826-1903) was an Italian painter of the Romantic period as well as an activist and fighter of the Risorgimento.
Pagliano was born in Casale Monferrato in the Kingdom of Sardinia and studied at the Brera Academy in Milan until 1848.
He initially trained with Giuseppe Sogni, then under the neoclassic painter Luigi Sabatelli.
He began his artistic career with paintings in a distinctly Neoclassical style, but very quickly he was won over to Romanticism, as championed then in Milan by Hayez and Tranquillo Cremona. He painted the Death of Luciano Manara.

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Bloomsbury Group | Art History and Sitemap

Bloomsbury is the name commonly used to identify a circle of intellectuals and artists who lived in Bloomsbury, near central London, in the period 1904-1940.
In 1905, a group of writers and intellectuals began to meet at the London home of the artist Vanessa Bell and her writer sister Virginia Woolf to share ideas and support each other’s creative activities… their meetings continued for the next three decades.
They were in revolt against everything Victorian and played a key role in introducing many modern ideas into Britain.

Roger Fry | A london garden