Louis Le Breton
Louis Le Breton (1818 in Douarnenez – 1866) was a French painter who specialised in marine paintings.
Le Breton studied medicine and took part in Dumont d'Urville's second voyage aboard the Astrolabe. After the official illustrator of the expedition died, Le Breton replaced him.
From 1847 he devoted himself mainly to depicting marine subjects for the French Navy.
Occult
Louis Le Breton executed 69 illustrations of occult demons, working from engravings by M. Jarrault, for the 1863 edition of Dictionnaire Infernal by Collin de Plancy.[1]
gollark: > Guys, what's the sampling rate of vacuum tubes?They aren't digital devices. They don't have one.
gollark: They, er, convert electrical signals to sound, as far as I can tell, so they're okay.
gollark: Mine are generic cheap Amazon ones.
gollark: *is listening to music downloaded from YouTube on cheap headphones off laptop's 3.5mm jack*
gollark: A "warmer sound" seems pretty nonsensical for *listening* to music, surely you just want maximum reproduction of the input signal from your DAC or whatever.
References
- Peter Fitting, Subterranean Worlds: A Critical Anthology, page 208 (Wesleyan University Press, 2004). ISBN 9780819567239
External links
- Adorning the world: art of the Marquesas Islands, an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on Louis Le Breton (no. 27)
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