Camille Pissarro Born: 10-Jul-1830 Birthplace: St. Thomas, Virgin Islands Died: 13-Nov-1903 Location of death: Éragny-sur-Epte, France Cause of death: unspecified Remains: Buried, Cimetière du Père Lachaise, Paris, France
Gender: Male Religion: Jewish Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Painter Nationality: France Executive summary: French Impressionist painter French painter, was born at St. Thomas in the Danish Antilles, of Jewish parents of Spanish extraction. He went to Paris at the age of twenty, and, as a pupil of Jean Corot, came into close touch with the Barbizon masters. Though at first he devoted himself to subjects of the kind which will ever be associated with the name of Millet, his interest was entirely absorbed by the landscape, and not by the figures. He subsequently fell under the spell of the rising impressionist movement and threw in his lot with Claude Monet and his friends, who were at that time the butt of public ridicule. Like Monet, he made sunlight, and the effect of sunlight on the objects of nature, the chief subjects of his paintings, whether in the country or on the Paris boulevards. About 1885 he took up the laboriously scientific method of the pointillists, but after a few years of these experiments he returned to a broader and more attractive manner. Indeed, in the closing years of his life he produced some of his finest paintings, in which he set down with admirable truth the peculiar atmosphere and color and teeming life of the boulevards, streets and bridges of Paris and Rouen. He died in Paris in 1903. Father: Abraham Gabriel Pissarro Mother: Rachel Manzano-Pomié Wife: Julie Vellay (maid, seven children) Son: Lucien (eldest)
University: École des Beaux-Arts, Paris
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Is the subject of books:
Camille Pissarro (1830–1903), 1954, BY: John Rewald
Camille Pissarro, 1977, BY: Kathleen Adler
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