Eyre Crowe (painter)
Eyre Crowe (born October 3, 1824 in Chelsea , † December 12, 1910 in London ) was an English painter , illustrator and printmaker .
Eyre Crowe, brother of Joseph Archer Crowe and uncle of Eyre Crowe , was taught initially in London by William Darley , then in Paris by Paul Delaroche , with whom he went to Rome in 1843 for further training.
In 1844 he returned to London and made his debut in 1846 with the picture: Prynne examines Archbishop Laud's bags in the Tower , whereupon the Battle of Azincourt , the Roman Carnival and Holbein paints King Edward VI . followed.
After residing in America from 1852 to 1857, he returned to London and created a series of pictures which reveal a great depth of sensation, excellent characterization of the figures, and a thorough study of details, but often harsh in color and are dry.
The most important of these include:
- Milton visits Galileo in prison (1859)
- Swift is reading a letter from his lover, Stella
- A slave market in Virginia
- Defoe in the pillory
- The funeral Goldsmiths (1863)
- Luther proposes the theses to the castle church in Wittenberg (1864)
- The vestal virgin
- The sheep shearing
- The Quakers
- The French scholars in Egypt, among others
literature
- General Artist Lexicon, Vol. 22, 1999, p. 454.
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Crowe, Eyre |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | English painter, illustrator and printmaker |
DATE OF BIRTH | October 3, 1824 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Chelsea |
DATE OF DEATH | December 12, 1910 |
Place of death | London |