Edouard Toudouze
Edouard Toudouze was born in Paris in 1848 and died in 1907. He specialized in decoration painting, mythological and historical subjects and illustration. His father was an architect and engraver and his mother was an illustrator for fashion journals; he entered the Paris Fine Arts School in 1865, where he became the student of Isidore Pils, Monticelli and Auguste Leloir, his uncle. He exhibited his first oils on canvas at the Salon in Paris in 1867 and then won the Prix de Rome in 1871. He was many times awarded medals at the Salon des Artistes Français (1871, 1877) and the Universal Exhibition in 1889 (silver medal). As one of the most famous decoration painter of the time, he obtained many private and public orders: the Ball Room of the Vanderbilt Mansion in New York; the ceiling and decorations of the Foyer of the Opéra Comique (Paris); models for a set of ten Gobelins Tapestries designated to the Britain Parliament in Rennes; a large fresco for the Sorbonne University in Paris.
Late 19th Century French Other Antique Edouard Toudouze
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Mid-20th Century Edouard Toudouze
Late 19th Century Dutch Other Antique Edouard Toudouze
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Early 19th Century Danish Other Antique Edouard Toudouze
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17th Century Korean Other Antique Edouard Toudouze
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Early 20th Century French Edouard Toudouze
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Late 19th Century German Antique Edouard Toudouze
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Mid-20th Century Haitian Folk Art Edouard Toudouze
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1970s American Modern Vintage Edouard Toudouze
Glass, Wood, Paper
Early 20th Century Belgian Other Edouard Toudouze
Canvas, Paint
19th Century French Rococo Antique Edouard Toudouze
Canvas, Wood
20th Century French Art Nouveau Edouard Toudouze
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Late 18th Century Belgian Other Antique Edouard Toudouze
Wood