Noel halle biography

Noël Halle canvas prints & artprints

Noël Halle : biography

Noël Halle, known as well with the following name Noel Hallé, is a frenchpainter born in 1711 in Paris, France and who died in 1781 in Paris, France. Noël Halle belonged to the french school art style. He mainly worked during the classical period in the 18 century.

Noël Halle : his main artworks

Noël Halle is famous for the following art works : bacchanale ou les dangers de l'ivresse (1759), eglé et silène ou eglé barbouillant silène de mûres pour le forcer à chanter l'histoire du monde, la course d'hippomène et d'atalante... which are numerous illustrations of his favorite subject of work : mythology, garden... In order to stare at his work in a museum or gallery, you need to go to musée d'art et d'histoire, cholet, france, palais des beaux-arts, lille, france, louvre, paris, france. The art work of Noël Halle are, indeed, mainly kept in musée d'art et d'histoire, cholet, france, palais des beaux-arts, lille, france, louvre, paris, france. Muzéo offers high quality canvas prints & artprints of the main artwor

Noël Hallé

French, 1711-1781

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BiographyNoël Hallé studied with his father, Claude-Guy Hallé, also the son of a painter, and with his brother-in-law Jean Restout. From 1737 to 1744, he lived and worked in Rome, where he copied Raphel’s Expulsion of Heliodorus in the Vatican and sketched after works by the Carracci family, Domenichino, and Tiepolo. In 1748, Hallé was received into the French Academy with the painting The Dispute of Minerva and Neptune, now in the Louvre. Highly esteemed by his colleagues, he enjoyed a successful career within the Academy. His works show a combination of the graceful rococo style, characterized by the ornate, delicate forms, and interest in pleasure, and the new seriousness of tone that marked the middle of the 18th century when Neoclassicism was in its initial stages.

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Noël Hallé

French painter

Noël Hallé (French pronunciation:[nɔɛlale]; 2 September 1711, Paris – 5 June 1781, Paris) was a French painter, draftsman and printmaker. He was born into a family of artists, the son of Claude-Guy Hallé.

Hallé took the Prix de Rome in 1736. He studied at the French Academy in Rome from 1737 until 1744 under the direction of Jean-Francois de Troy.[1] As a history painter, he received royal commissions for work at the Grand Trianon, Choisy, the Petit Trianon, and for the Batiments; he worked for the Gobelins Manufactory factory, for the city of Paris and for the King of Poland.[1] Among his works are Ancient Rome-related The Death of Seneca, Cornelia, Mother of the Gracchi and The Justice of Trajan. Hallé has had numerous works displayed at the Louvre including La Dispute de Minerve et de Neptune and La fuite en Egypte.[2]

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