Claude Lorrain (1600-1682)
Claude Lorrain, French painter, who, like Nicolas Poussin was one of the great
masters of 17th-century classical landscape painters. Drawing its inspiration from classical
antiquity, this school of painting presents nature as harmonious, serene, and often majestic.
Subject matter is taken from Greek, Roman, or biblical sources, and human figures in the landscape
are often depicted in pastoral or antique dress. Claude's particular contribution to the ideal
landscape was his masterly treatment of light. From his early paintings, which have strong,
dramatic lighting effects, to his later ones, which are softly drenched with limpid light, he was
unsurpassed as a illuminist.
Claude, who was also known by his pseudonym Le Lorrain, or as
Claude
Lorraine, was born in the duchy of Lorraine (from which his name is derived). He
traveled to Rome before he was 20 years old and, with the exception of one trip back to France from
1625 to 1627, he lived in Rome all his life. His principal teacher was the Italian painter Agostino
Tassi, who taught him the elements of landscape, seascape, and perspective. He was also influenced
by the German painter Adam Elsheimer, whose strong depiction of light Claude adapted and refined,
and by the Italian painters Annibale Carracci and Domenichino, whose monumental landscapes led him
to enlarge his scale. The gradual evolution of Claude's style
falls into three main periods. In the first, his landscapes often featured slanting light and
employed other experimental lighting effects. He also painted idealized scenes of seaports, usually
with ships at anchor in a harbour flanked by palaces. In Harbour Scene (1634, Hermitage, St
Petersburg) he shows the sun on the horizon, and characteristically uses the sun to give the
painting depth. Forgeries of his work began to appear in the 1630s, and to aid to their
identification Claude began
compiling his Liber Veritatis ("Book of Truth"; British Museum, London) in
about 1635. In it he sketched drawings of almost all his paintings, creating a record of his work.
In the second phase, which began after 1640, his paintings became more tranquil, bathed in a warm,
even light. Their subject matter is drawn from Classical or biblical sources, as in Landscape:
The Marriage of Isaac and Rebekah (1648, National Gallery, London). During the 1660s, the third
phase, although Claude continued to work in his prior mode, some of his works showed a tendency
towards a more visionary, symbolic style, with a colour range of cool, silvery tones and a renewed
use of dramatic lighting.
Claude died in Rome on November 23, 1682. His art influenced later Dutch, French, and
especially English landscape painters through the middle of the 19th century. J. M. W. Turner was
especially indebted to Claude and was inspired by his compositions.
Extract from Microsoft Encarta
Lorrain’s masterful drawings and etchings, usually pastoral landscapes of the Roman countryside,
sometimes including religious or mythological themes, were highly prized by the English aristocracy
visiting France and Italy on their grand tours in the 18th Century. Done in sepia, these drawings
and etchings found their way into most of the great English noble art collections. In 1819, Richard
Earlom in London published his Liber Veritatus, a beautifully engraved set of Claude Lorrain
drawings and etchings in private collections. The prints are aquatints in sepia, with copperplate
engraved titles. Sizes vary from 8" x 10¼" to 9¼" x 12¼". In 1840, F. C. Lewis in London published
another number of Claude Lorrain sepia drawings and etchings in his Liber Studiorum.
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