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Leo Herrmann | |
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Born | (1853-07-02)July 2, 1853 |
Died | 1927 (aged 73–74) |
Nationality | French |
Movement | Anti-clerical art |
Leo Herrmann (2 July 1853 – 1927) was a French anti-clerical painter.
Herrmann was educated at the École des Beaux-Arts, and learned under the tutelage Ernest Meissonier. He entered the Parisian art scene in 1875 at the Paris Salon. Herrmann occasionally painted dandies or soldiers, but became a successful artist by creating works that depict cardinals wearing red cassocks in comical scenarios.
Some of his paintings have clerics feeding swans; others have cardinals themselves painting. Another has a cardinal drinking wine through a long straw.
Works
His first painting, shown in 1875, is A Bout d'Argument. Others include La Bonne Histoire (1876), Le Scandale du Jour (1877), Au Rendez-Vous (1887), Le Goûter (1889), Au Cabare (1896), The Cordon Bleu, Suzette's Slipper, and L'incroyable.
References
- ^ Singer, Isidore; Haneman, Frederick T. (1906). "Herrmann, Leo". Jewish Encyclopedia.
- "Macmillan's Magazine". Vol. 50. New York. 1884. p. 95 – via Google Books.
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(help) - ^ Zafran, Eric M. (1992). Cavaliers and Cardinals. Cincinnati: Taft Museum. p. 54. ISBN 0-915577-23-2.
- "Leo Herrmann". Haynes Fine Art. Haynes Fine Art of Broadway. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
- Catalogue of the Private Gallery of Valuable Paintings Belonging to Mr. Edward M. Knox. American Art Association. 1906. Nos. 10 & 48 – via Google Books.
- "More New Pictures". The Detroit Art Loan Record (125). H.A. and K.B. Ford: 164, 173. 1883 – via Google Books.
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