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The Proserpine at anchor in Venice
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The Proserpine at anchor in Venice

Medium

Black chalk, with framing lines in red chalk

Dimensions

Sheet: 7 × 12 1/4 in. (17.8 × 31.1 cm)

Collection

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

Credit

Purchase, Stephen A. Geiger Gift, 2014

Classification

Drawings

Department

Drawings and Prints

Rights

Public Domain

About Louis François Cassas

1756–1827France

Cassas studied with both Neoclassical and Rococo painters. He made extensive travels throughout his life, and is best known for his views, including Rome, Venice, Naples, Sicily, the Istrian and Dalmatian coasts, Constantinople, Syria, Egypt, Palestine, Cyprus, and Asia Minor. He drew Classical ruins and many ancient Middle Eastern that had never before been recorded. Back in France, after the Revolution he was appointed as drawing professor at the Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory, where he remained until his death. In addition to his views, he is known for around 745 models of ancient monuments in cork and terracotta that he made for Paris's École des Beaux-Arts; these influenced Neoclassicism's development in the early 1800s.

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