A Midsummer Night's Dream by Gustave doré (circa 1870). 🖤

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I was searching for something Bruegelesque, but didn't find anything yet. In that illu, so far, I found references (https://t.co/WT05SyvEAQ) to C.L. Dodgson, Gustave Doré, Marcus Gheeraerts I+II, Matthias Grünewald, John Martin, J.E. Millais.

+++ https://t.co/YerSbcRqsN +++

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Closing soon : exhibition of Gustave Moreau's watercolours illustrating the Fables of La Fontaine from Waddesdon Manor, the series is on view in Paris, Musee Gustave Moreau until 28 February 2022. And here a short film https://t.co/ry52ChKPuk

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1. Jules Verne. "Journey to the Center of the Earth."
2. Gustave Flaubert. "Madame Bovary.

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Perseus and Andromeda by Gustave Moreau

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Gustave Moreau (1826–1898), Hesiod and the Muse(s)

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As a Corollary,having identified many hundreds of rediscovered unidentified Portraits,incl 40 lost Artists Self-portraits,Kings,Queens,Nobles,etc. I felt synergies btw. "Gustave Caillebotte's late c.1892 Self-portrait"with that of Leonardo's 1513 Rome "Portrait of Michelangelo"👨‍🎨

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Gustave Doré, entrée du purgatoire, illustration de la Divine Comédie de Dante, vers 1855.

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Gustave Dore's painting of a family of acrobat/ entertainers helping their injured child. (1853)

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~ Gustave Moreau (1882)

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"Ukiyoe Leviathan bears down on a tiny ship on a stormy sea by Gustave Dore unreal engine VFX realistic rendering" - made with

https://t.co/MDIvq17aJq

https://t.co/MDIvq17aJq

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The Family of Street Acrobats, the Injured Child
(Oil on Canvas)
By Gustave Doré

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Gustave Dore (1832-83 French ) Two Owls. He was a fab Illustrator. From the age of five he was a prodigy artist creating drawings that were well beyond his years , then he had a go at carving in stone. At the age of fifteen he was producing caricatures for a French Newspaper.

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Gustave Doré - andromeda ... Thanks to you for sharing and good evening

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From the 1861 illustrated edition of Dante’s ‘Divine Comedy’. Engraving by M. Gustave Doré.

https://t.co/uo19EDaioK

"Lo!" he exclaim'd, "lo! Dis: and lo! the place,
Where thou hast need to arm thy heart with strength."
-Canto XXXIV., lines 20,21.

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A class assignment, a rendition of The Desperate Man by Gustave Courbet but using OC Saalah Inferno, my baby love <3 Had a great time doing this and pushing myself. Commissions open :3

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