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See also: born of very poor parents at the See also: village of Chamagne in See also: Lorraine
.
When it was discovered that he made no progress at school, he was apprenticed, it is commonly said, to a pastry-See also: cook, but this is extremely dubious
.
At the age of twelve, being See also: left an See also: orphan, he went to live at See also: Freiburg on the Rhine with an elder See also: brother, See also: Jean Gelee, a See also: wood-carver of moderate merit, and under him he designed arabesques and foliage
.
He afterwards rambled to See also: Rome to seek a livelihood; but from his clownishness and ignorance of the language, he failed to obtain permanent employment
.
He next went to Naples, to study landscape See also: painting under Godfrey Waals, a painter of much repute
.
With him he remained two years; then he returned to Rome, and was domesticated until See also: April 1625 with another landscape-painter, Augustin Tassi, who hired him to grind his See also: colours and to do all the See also: household drudgery
.
His master, hoping to make See also: Claude serviceable in some of his greatest See also: works, advanced him in the rules of perspective and the elements of design
.
Under his tuition the mind of Claude began to expand, and he devoted himself to See also: artistic study with See also: great eagerness
.
He exerted his utmost industry to explore the true principles of painting by an incessant examination of nature; and for this purpose he made his studies in the open See also: fields, where he very frequently remained from sunrise till sunset, watching the effect of the shifting See also: light upon the landscape
.
He generally sketched whatever he thought beautiful or striking, marking every tinge of light with a similar colour; from these sketches he perfected his landscapes
.
Leaving Tassi, he made a tour in See also: Italy, See also: France and a See also: part of See also: Germany, including his native Lorraine, suffering numerous misadventures by the way
.
Karl Dervent, painter to the duke of Lorraine, kept him as assistant for a See also: year; and he painted at See also: Nancy the architectural subjects on the ceiling of the Carmelite See also: church
.
He did not, however, relish this employment, and in 1627 returned to Rome . Here, painting two landscapes for See also: Cardinal Bentivoglio, he earned the See also: protection of See also: Pope See also: Urban VIII. and from about 1637 he rapidly See also: rose into celebrity
.
Claude was acquainted not only with the facts, but also with the See also: laws of nature; and the See also: German painter See also: Joachim von See also: Sandrart relates that he used to explain, as they walked together through the fields, the causes of the different appearances of the same landscape at different See also: hours of the See also: day, from the reflections or refractions of light, or from the See also: morning and evening dews or vapours, with all the precision of a natural philosopher
.
He elaborated his pictures with great care; and if any performance See also: fell See also: short of his ideal, he altered, erased and repainted it several times over
.
His skies are aerial and full of lustre, and every See also: object harmoniously illumined
.
His distances and colouring are delicate, and his tints have a sweetness and variety till then unexampled
.
He frequently gave an uncommon tenderness to his finished trees by See also: glazing
.
His figures, however, are very indifferent; but he was so conscious of his deficiency in this respect, that he usually engaged other artists to paint them for him, among whom were See also: Courtois and Filippo Lauri
.
Indeed, he was wont to say that he sold his landscapes and gave away his figures
.
In See also: order to avoid a repetition of the same subject, and also to detect the very numerous See also: spurious copies of his works, he made tinted outline drawings (in six paper books prepared for this purpose) of allthose pictures which were transmitted to different countries; and on the back of each See also: drawing he wrote the name of the purchaser
.
These books he named Libri di verita
.
This valuable See also: work(now belonging to the duke of Devonshire) has been engraved and published, and has always been highly esteemed by students of the See also: art of landscape
.
Claude, who had suffered much from See also: gout, died in Rome at the age of eighty-two, on the 21st (or perhaps the 23rd) of See also: November 1682, leaving his See also: wealth, which was considerable, between his only surviving relatives, a See also: nephew and an adopted daughter (? niece)
.
Many choice specimens of his See also: genius may be seen in the See also: National Gallery and in the Louvre; the landscapes in the Altieri and Colonna palaces in Rome are also of especial celebrity
.
A See also: list has been printed showing no less than 92 examples in the various public galleries of See also: Europe
.
He himself regarded a landscape which he painted in the See also: Villa Madama, being a cento of various views with great abundance and variety of leafage, and a composition of See also: Esther and See also: Ahasuerus, as his finest works; the former he refused to sell, although See also: Clement IX. offered to cover its See also: surface with gold pieces
.
He etched a series of twenty-eight landscapes, See also: fine impressions of which are greatly prized
.
Full of amenity, and deeply sensitive to the graces of nature, Claude was long deemed the See also: prince of landscape painters, and he must always be accounted a See also: prime See also: leader in that See also: form of art, and in his day a great enlarger and refiner of its province
.
Claude was a See also: man of amiable and See also: simple character, very kind to his pupils, a patient and unwearied worker; in his own sphere of study, his mind was stored (as we have seen) with observation and knowledge, but he continued an unlettered man till his See also: death
.
Famous and highly patronized though he was in all his later years, he seems to have been very little known to his brother artists, with the single exception of Sandrart
.
This painter is the chief See also: direct authority for the facts of Claude's See also: life (Academia Artis Pictoriae, 1683); See also: Baldinucci, who obtained information from some of Claude's immediate survivors, relates various incidents to a different effect (Notizie dei professori del disegno)
.
See also Victor See also: Cousin, Sur Claude Gelee (1853) ; M
.
F
.
Sweetser, Claude Lorrain (1878); Lady See also: Dilke, Claude Lorrain (1884)
.
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