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Marie Ernestine Lavieille (or Marie Lavieille) (October 11, 1852, in Barbizon – November 12, 1937 in Le Mans) was a French painter.
She was a landscape artist, and studied under her father, Eugène Lavieille.
She exhibited from 1877 to 1890 at the Salon, which became the Salon des Artistes Français, and from 1882 to 1913 at the art exhibitions of the Union des Femmes Peintres et Sculpteurs.
In 1878 she married the French sculptor Charles Georges Ferville-Suan.
François-Auguste Biard, born François Thérèse Biard was a French painter, known for his adventurous travels and the works depicting his experiences.
Marie Adrien Lavieille, born Marie Petit, was a French painter. She was a pupil of her father, Jean-Jacques Petit, and of Joseph Blanc.
Charles Georges Ferville-Suan was a French sculptor.
Lucien-Pierre Sergent was a French academic painter. He was known for his military art.
Louis Robert Bate was a French sculptor, as was his wife Juliette Briet-Bate. He was a pupil of Jules Coutan and Paul Landowski and a member of the Société Coloniale des Artistes Français and won in succession, second prize of the Prix de Rome in 1927, bursary for residence at the Villa Velázquez Madrid in 1932, bursary for French Equatorial Africa, Prix de Guadeloupe in 1935, and Prix de l'Indochine in 1938. In Indochina he gained permanent employment at the school of architecture in Dalat till his death aged 50.
Louis-Auguste Lapito was a French painter. He exhibited at many Paris Salons. He was named a Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur in 1836, and a Chevalier of the Order of Leopold as well.
Paul Biva was a French painter. His paintings, both Realist, Naturalist in effect, principally represented intricate landscape paintings or elaborate flower settings, much as the work of his older brother, the artist Henri Biva (1848–1929). Paul Biva was a distinguished member of National Horticultural Society of France from 1898 until his untimely death two years later.
Henriette Tassé was a Quebec journalist and writer.
Adélaïde Binart was a French neoclassical painter-artist.
Angélique Mezzara, born Marie Angélique Foulon, was a French portrait painter and miniaturist, who frequently worked in pastels. During a time when few women were painters, she exhibited regularly for nearly 30 years at the Paris Salon, the major art event of the time. Two of her sons became sculptors, and a daughter exhibited with her at the Paris exhibition as a painter.
Claire Bertrand-Eisenschitz, also known as Claire Bertrand, was a French expressionist artist born in Sèvres on 22 June 1890. She died on 8 December 1969. She was the wife of the painter Willy Eisenschitz, also a French painter and draftsman.
Caroline Swagers was a French painter of miniatures.
Paul-Alfred Parent de Curzon was a French painter, known for his genre scenes and landscapes with figures.
Zoé Goyet was a French portrait painter, pastel artist, and teacher. Her works were exhibited in the Paris Salon from 1834 to 1841. She was the wife of painter Eugène Goyet and daughter-in-law of painter Jean-Baptiste Goyet.
Simone Marie Suzanne Boutarel was a French sculptor and medallist. She was principally known for her small-scale works representing animals and birds.
François Théodore Devaulx, or Théodore-François Devaulx, was a French sculptor.
Gisèle d'Estoc, pseudonym of Marie-Paule Alice Courbe, was a French writer, sculptor, and feminist. She was also a duellist and cross dresser. Madame Paule Parent Des Barres was either her married name or another pseudonym, while her pen names included, Gyz-El and G. d’Estoc.
Inès Esménard (1789–1859), sometimes known as Inès d’Esménard, was a 19th century French painter and portrait miniaturist.
François Martin-Kavel was a French genre and still life painter and illustrator, born in Paris and lived in Neuilly-sur-Seine. He is known for his portraits of women, often in exotic costumes or undress. He debuted and regularly exhibited at the Salon des Artistes Français; he was awarded a medal for his work in 1881.
Jeanne-Marie Barbey, also known as Louise Jeanne Marie Barbée was a French artist, painter and photographer, whose work frequently concentrated on Brittany.