Gaspar de Crayer had an uncanny ability to imitate the Rubens style, and though this son of Flanders never set foot in Italy, traces of Titian and Veronese in his art abound. As his painting developed, his figures grew less harsh and foreboding in demeanor, and in his last decades, his work tended toward the more sensational.
Ferdinand of Austria, after Painting by Gaspar de CrayerGaspar de Crayer Flemish (1584 - 1669) |
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Gaspar de Crayer had an uncanny ability to imitate the Rubens style, and though this son of Flanders never set foot in Italy, traces of Titian and Veronese in his art abound. As his painting developed, his figures grew less harsh and foreboding in demeanor, and in his last decades, his work tended toward the more sensational. |
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