After Breakfast (Päättynyt aamiainen / Avslutad frukost), 1890, by Elin Danielson-Gambogi (1861–1919)
Apparently this painting is the first depiction of a woman with a hangover in Finnish art, at least by a female artist. It was condemned and mocked by the contemporaries; even Danielson-Gambogi herself later seems to have regretted presenting it publicly, calling it "that idiotic breakfast thing". *
Obviously I disagree with her: I've always loved this painting and its atmosphere :)
* Leponiemi, S. (2021). Niin kauan kuin tunnen eläväni: Taidemaalari Elin Danielson-Gambogi. Gummerus.
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Elin Kleopatra Danielson-Gambogi (3 September 1861 – 31 December 1919) was a Finnish painter, best known for her realist works and portraits.
Danielson-Gambogi was part of the first generation of Finnish Women Artists who received professional education in art, the so-called "painter sisters' generation". via Wikipedia
learn more about Finnish Women Artists palianshow.wordpress.com/2022/12/06/finnish-women-artists
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Elin Danielson-Gambogi - Self-Portrait (1900)
Elin Danielson was ten years old when her father, Karl Emil Danielson, committed suicide, despondent at the failure of the family farm. Her mother, Rosa Amalia Gestrin, encouraged her to continue her studies, with the financial help of her brother, who would be a longtime supporter of the artist. At fifteen, Danielson entered Helsinki’s Finnish Art Society Drawing School, where, in addition to drawing technique and painting, she studied painting on porcelain, training that proved invaluable in enabling her to support herself. In 1880 she obtained a teaching diploma, having taken classes with the painter Adolf von Becker, whose private school was attended by several young Finns, including Helene Schjerfbeck and Ellen Thesleff. (source)
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I wanna be curated
1. Lavinia Fontana, Self-portrait, circa 1577-1585, Saragossa Museum 2. Friederike Julie Lisiewska, Self portrait of the artist, aged twenty-one, 1793, Staatliches Museum Schwerin 3. Na Hye-sok, Self-Portrait, c. 1928, Suwon Ipark Museum of Art 4. Elisa Counis, Self-portrait in Uffizi Gallery 1839, 1839, Galleria degli Uffizi 5. Marietta Robusti, Venecian lady, 16th century, Museo del Prado 6. Alice Pike Barney, Self-Portrait with Palette, 1906, Renwick Gallery 7. Elin Danielson-Gambogi, Self-Portrait, 1900, Konstmuseet Ateneum 8. Henriette Lorimier, Self-portrait, between 1804 and 1806, Musée Magnin 9. Lucia Anguissola, Self Portrait, 1557, Castello Sforzesco, Milan
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MWW Artwork of the Day (3/18/24)
Elin Danielson-Gambogi (Finnish, 1861–1919)
After Breakfast (1890)
Oil on canvas, 67 x 94 cm.
Private Collection
In 1883 Danielson received a grant to travel to Paris. There she enrolled at the Académie Colarossi, received training from the painters Gustave Courtois and Raphaël Collin, and began to study sculpture under Auguste Rodin. In the summertime she left the capital for the artists’ communities in Brittany, where the landscapes were a perpetual source of inspiration. lt was here that she met the naturalist painter Jules Bastien-Lepage, who inspired her to lighten her palette. The young artist divided her time between France and Finland.
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Artist: Elin Danielson-Gambogi (Detail).
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If it's okay with you, could you please give the artist names for the AI generator? All of the portraits are so pretty and I want to know the artists so I can find more :D! Thank you and hope you're having a great day!
Hey Anon,
Sure! I probably should've listed the artists, sorry I didn't. Do note, for many of the portraits, I ended up using two or three artists at the same time. As I believe I've said elsewhere, the artists were selected purely based on their nationality and how I thought their style would translate to portraiture. I found most of the via google, and had a lot of fun learning about some artists I'd not heard of before!
Argentina: Norma Bessouet and Raquel Forner
Australia: Frederick McCubbin and Kim Leutwyler
Brazil: Manuel Lopes Rodrigues, Manuel de Araújo Porto Alegre, and Almeida Junior
Canada: Frederick Varley Bertha M. Ingle and Robert Harris
Colombia: Ricardo Acevedo Bernal and Andrés de Santa Maria
China: Shen Zhou and Tang Yin and Gu Hongzhong
Croatia: Vlaho Bukovac, Federiko Benkovic, and Robert Auer
Czechia: Alphonse Mucha
Egypt: Helena of Egypt, Mahmoud Sa'id, and Abdel Aal Hassan
England: John William Waterhouse and Joseph Wright of Derby
Ethiopia: Adis Gebru and Afewerk ekle
Finland: Elin Danielson-Gambogi, Pekka Halonen, and Helene Schjerfbeck
France: Charles-Amable Lenoir and Claude Monet
Germany: Albrecht Dürer, Franz Xaver Winterhalter, and Otto Dix
India: Raja Ravi Varma and Amrita Sher-Gil
Ireland: Frederic William Burton
Japan: Yokoyama Taikan and Utamaro Kitagawa
Jordan: Muhanna Al-Dura and Zaina El-Said
Mexico: Frida Kahlo and José Salomé Pina
Morocco: Zakaria Ramhani, Abbès Saladi, and Hassan El Glaoui
New Zealand: Gottfried Lindauer and Kura Te Waru Rewiri
Portugal: Antonio Duarte and Columbano
Philippines: Fernando Amorsolo and Juan Luna
Scotland: Arthur Melville
South Korea: Joongwon Jeong, Chae Yongshin, and Lee Quede
Sweden: Carl Larsson and Anders Zorn
Switzerland: Cuno Amiet, Arnold Böcklin, and Jean-Étienne Liotard
United Arab Emirates: Abdulqader Alrais and Fatma Abdullah Lootah
United States: John Singer Sargent and Mary Cassatt
Wales: Gwen John and Brenda Chamberlain
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