Not Too Much to Carry

  • Item #
  • 122010
  • Orientation
  • Portrait/Vertical
Item:
173 of 284
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William-Adolphe Bouguereau

1825-1905

William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825-1905) was a French academic painter and traditionalist. He was a staunch traditionalist whose realistic genre paintings and mythological themes made him one of the most popular artists during the Académie des Beaux-Arts in his life. Bouguereau's works were drawn from tradition, avoiding the controversy of modern subjects, and he became a celebrated painter in his own time.

Bouguereau's mythological paintings such as The Birth of Venus and Nymphs and Satyr are among his most famous works. He also produced many popular portraits and religious/allegorical paintings like The Bohemian, First Mourning, and Pieta. Bouguereau's technical mastery and attention to detail allowed him to render the human body with unparalleled realism. Despite criticism from the avant-garde, Bouguereau's paintings were immensely popular, and he remains a prominent figure in the Académie's revivalist tradition.

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Other Paintings by William-Adolphe Bouguereau

Study of a Woman's Head
Subject: Portraits
Young Gypsies
Subject: Mother and Child
Two Sisters
Subject: Family
The Birth of Venus
Subject: Angels
The Priestess of Bacchus
Subject: Fantasy and Mythology
The Dressmaker
Subject: Girls
Evening Mood
Subject: Nude Women
Faun and Bacchante
Subject: Nude People
Maternal Admiration
Subject: Mother and Child
Homer and His Guide
Subject: Historic / Patriotic / Wars