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Beauties of Claude Lorrain
Claude Gellée (1600–1682),
called Claude Lorrain after the French region
where he was born, spent most of his life
and career in Rome and was the leading (and
most prolific) figure of the Italian school
that first made landscape painting a respectable
art form. He influenced contemporaries like
Nicolas Poussin and many later artists including
Constable, Turner, and the American Hudson
River school, as well as "landscape" gardening,
especially in Britain, and ultimately the
way people looked at nature itself. In the
Romantic period, from the late 1770s on,
his work was well known through collections
such as Beauties of Claude Lorraine [sic]: Twenty-four
of His Choicest Landscapes Engraved by Brumley,
Lupton, and Others (1825) — itself
a selection made from a larger compilation,
the three-volume Liber Veritatis, or A
Collection of Two Hundred Prints, after the
Original Designs of Claude le Lorrain (1777).
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