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Rochegrosse, George (1859-1938) - Automobile-Club de France 1901

Rochegrosse, George (1859-1938) - Automobile-Club de France 1901

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This is an Art Nouveau poster for the Automobile-Club de France by French artist Georges Rochegrosse.

This download consists of 1 image, in jpeg format, that is 300dpi and 4725 pixels wide by 6846 pixels tall.

The picture is out of copyright and in the public domain, so you are free to use it in whatever way you'd like, including commercial use.

Georges Antoine Rochegrosse (1859-1938) was a French historical and decorative painter.

He was born in Versailles and studied in Paris with Jules Joseph Lefebvre and Gustave Clarence Rodolphe Boulanger. His themes are generally historical, and he treated them on a colossal scale and in an emotional naturalistic style, with a distinct revelling in horrible subjects and details.

He made his Paris Salon début in 1882 with Vitellius traîné dans les rues de Rome par la populace (1882). He followed this the year afterwards with Andromaque (1882-83), which won that year's prestigious Prix du Salon. Then followed La Jacquerie (1885), La mort de Babylone (1891), The death of the Emperor Geta (1899), and Barbarian ambassadors at the Court of Justinian (1907), all of which exemplify his strong and spirited but sensational and often brutal painting. In quite another style and beautiful in colour is his Le Chevalier aux Fleurs (The Knight of Flowers) (1894).

He was elected an Officer of the Legion of Honour in 1892 and received the Medal of Honour in 1906 for The Red Delight. Rochegrosse also illustrated several books. His great love, his wife Marie Rochegrosse (née Leblond), had died in 1920. He lived his final years in El Biar, Algeria, where he died. He is buried in Paris, in the Montparnasse Cemetery, near the poet Theodore de Banville, his stepfather.

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