Fernand Peel of Cordova
See also: Cordova
Ferdinand Emmanuel Peel of Cordova , known as Fernand Pelez , born with Paris the January 18th 1848 and died in Paris in 1913, is a realistic French painter, naturalist, even academic in full impressionist period.
He is the pupil of Felix-Joseph Barrias, Alexandre Cabanel and Jean-Leon Gérôme. He begins as painter from history to the Living room from 1866. To this first time Death from the Convenient Emperor (museum of Béziers) and Adam and Eve go back (museum of Mills).
As from 1880, under the influence of the tables of Jules Bastien-Lepage, it represents the working class with an academic and realistic, quasi-photographic invoice. One can as consider as his “children beggars” fall under a form of Spanish esthetics, in the line of Murillo. Painter of human misery, it carries out large sizes, of which Grimaces and miseries, the travelling acrobats (1888) like the bread Mouthful, Charity (Petit Palais, Paris).
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