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Query was: mental
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- Title: Short Bio of François Boucher (1703-1770)
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- sentimental, facile style was too widely imitated and fell out of
- Title: Short Bio of Sir Burne-Jones (1833-1898)
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- and biblical themes, are noted for their sentimentality and dreamlike
- Title: Short Bio of Carracci (1557-1602)
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- illusionistic elements, it retains fundamentally the self-contained and
- work became accepted as a fundamental part of composing any ambitious history
- Title: Short Bio of Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin (1699-1779)
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- He favored simple still lifes and unsentimental
- Title: Short Bio of Correggio (Antonio Allegri)
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- initiated a style of sentimental elegance and conscious allure with soft
- Title: Short Bio of Hugo Goes
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- also to travel. In 1481 he suffered a mental breakdown (he had a tendency
- Title: Short Bio of Vincent Gogh (1853-90)
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- a mental illness that eventually resulted in suicide. Among his
- Title: Short Bio of Jean-Baptiste Greuze
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- (Louvre, Paris) and went on to win enormous popularity with similar sentimental
- Title: Short Bio of Jean-François Millet (1814-75)
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- of tonal values, but his draughtsmanship had a monumentality
- Title: Short Bio of Peter Rubens
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- painting, he fundamentally revitalized and redirected northern European
- A love of monumental forms and dynamic effects is most readily apparent in
- Title: Short Bio of Georges Seurat (1859-1891)
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- monumental paintings, 60 smaller ones, drawings, and sketchbooks. He kept his
- Title: Short Bio of Jim Warren
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- 1990: Painted "Earth...Love It or Lose It." This painting received critical acclaim, was featured on posters, magazines, billboards, t-shirts ect. and soon became the visual representation for the global environmental movement.
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