Daniel Hallé
Daniel Hallé (27 September 1614, Rouen – 14 July 1675, Paris) was a French painter.
He studied painting in his birthplace and was apprenticed there on 4 November 1631. He produced a Multiplication of the Loaves (1665) and Martyrdom of Saint-Symphorien. He was the father of the painter Claude Guy Hallé[1] and a grandfather of the painter Noël Hallé.[2]
Works
- Christ in the Tomb, musée Greuze, Tournus
- The Nativity, musée des beaux-arts de Rouen
gollark: Look cute? Peck at other dragons feebly?
gollark: Yes, and most sensibly-thought-out time travel models, if the consequences are properly explored, allow ridiculous power.
gollark: Of course, mageia xenowyrms will beat them.
gollark: `Their strong magic makes them one of the most feared breeds of dragons.`
gollark: `They eat anything they can kill, which is almost everything.`
References
- "The Eighteenth Century" A History of French Painting. Retrieved 2017-04-11.
- "Noel Halle bio" Matthiesen Gallery. Retrieved 2017-04-11.
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