Developments in the 19th Century
 




Art Styles in 19th century - Art Map

 




Felicien Rops


 



Felicien Rops

(1833-1898)

 

Belgian painter and printmaker. The son of a textile manufacturer, he began his artistic education at the local art academy. At the age of 20 he went to live in Brussels where he frequented the Académie de Saint-Luc and practised lithography. His caricatures of political and other public figures and his satires of middle-class life were first published in the student paper Le Crocodile and then in the magazine Uylenspiegel, for which he worked until 1862, contributing two lithographs a week in 1856, but fewer in the following years. His models were mainly Gavarni and Daumier, but in The Waterloo Medal (1858) one can trace the influence of Gillray, while his impressive L’Ordre règne à Varsovie (1863) was obviously inspired by his French predecessor, Grandville. Rops sometimes preferred to use etching (then coming back into fashion) for his illustrations. He made four etchings for Charles de Coster’s Flemish Legends (1858) and five for his Tales from Brabant (1861). In 1862 he visited Paris where he worked with two of the leading etchers of his time, Félix Bracquemond and Jules Jacquemart. He concentrated increasingly on etching and from about 1865 abandoned lithograp

 
 
 

Estudios de impudicias



 

Gozo hermafrodita



 


El orden reina en Varsovia



 


La felicidad en el crimen



 


El idolo


 



El rapto

 




Hipocresia






La bebedora de ajenjo

 



La cortina carmesi


 




La Lira