- Louis Gallait
Louis Gallait (born
May 9 orMay 10 ,1810 inTournai , Hainaut (Belgium ); diedNovember 20 ,1887 inBrussels ) was a Belgian painter.He first studied in his native town under
Philippe Auguste Hennequin . In 1832 his first picture, "Tribute to Caesar", won a prize at the exhibition atGhent . He then went toAntwerp to prosecute his studies underMathieu Ignace van Brée , and in the following year exhibited at theBrussels Salon "Christ Healing the Blind". This picture was purchased by subscription and placed in theTournai Cathedral . Gallait next went toParis , whence he sent to the Belgian Salons "Job on the Dunghill", "Montaigne Visiting Tasso in Prison"; and, in 1841, "The Abdication of Charles V.", in the Brussels Gallery. This was hailed as a triumph, and gained for the painter a European reputation. Official invitations then caused him to settle at Brussels.Among his greater works may be named: "The Last Honors paid to Counts Egmont and Horn by the Corporations of the Town of Brussels", now at Tournai; "The Death of Egmont", in theBerlin gallery ; the "Coronation of Baudouin, Emperor of Constantinople", painted forVersailles ; "The Temptation of St Anthony", in the palace at Brussels; "The Siege of Antioch", Art and Liberty, a "Portrait of M. B. Dumortier" and "The Plague at Tournay", all in the Brussels gallery. "A Gipsy Woman and her Children" was painted in 1852. M. Gallait has all the gifts that may be acquired by work, taste, judgment and determination, wroteThéophile Gautier ; his art is that of a man of tact, a skilled painter, happy in his dramatic treatment but superficial. No doubt, this Walloon artist, following the example of the Flemings of the Renaissance and the treatment of Belgian classical painters~ and the French Romantic school, sincerely aimed at truth; unfortunately, misled by contemporary taste, he could not conceive of it excepting as dressed in sentimentality. As an artist employed by the State he exercised considerable influence, and for a long period he was the leader of public taste in Brussels.References
*1911
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