Édouard Delvaux

Édouard Delvaux (French: [dɛlvo]; Brussels, 1806 – Spa, 1862) was a Belgian Romantic painter. The grandson of the sculptor Laurent Delvaux and apprentice of the painter Henri Van Assche, his work mainly consisted of bucolic rural scenes from his many trips to France, Switzerland, Germany and Italy. He won silver medal at the 1836 Brussels exhibition and was director of the École de dessin at Spa.

Paysage bucolique, 1840s (wood, 32x24cm)

Sources

  • Raymond Delvaux, Flor De Smedt, Felix Meurisse & Frans Jozef van Droogenbroeck, Het Kasteel van Walfergem, van Hof te Huseghem over Speelgoed van de familie t'Kint tot Landhuis van de familie Delvaux, Asse, Koninklijke Heemkring Ascania, Asse, 2007.
gollark: And they use relativistic cryoapioform cooling, so that isn't actually a problem.
gollark: Why would that be useful? The source wouldn't care about how it was modulated; you would really only just cause the heat sinks to warm up marginally.
gollark: (osmarks internet radio™ lasers are not in fact radio-based and thus masers, but merely encode osmarks internet radio™ as phase-modulated X-rays)
gollark: Deploying osmarks internet radio™ lasers.
gollark: I refuse to acknowledge such decisions, so they don't actually exist.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.