CAULLERY, Louis de


CAULLERY, Louis de

Artist

(b. ca. 1580, Caulery, d. 1621, Antwerpen)

Details

Flemish painter, a pioneer in the genre of courtly gatherings in Flemish painting of the 17th century. He probably came from the village of Caullery near Cambrai, but moved to Antwerp in 1594 to train with Joos de Momper and was accepted as a Master there in 1602. While the date he went to Italy in uncertain, his works reveal that he spent time in Venice, Florence and Rome. He was particularly interested in genre painting and dealt with a high variety of scenes: carnivals on ice, fireworks, bull-fights, open-air entertainments, allegories of the five senses and get-togethers in the spirit of the Fontainebleau School. His figures are particularly elongated and strike elegant poses and are generally characterised with smooth pale faces and broad foreheads. His colour palette reveals the influence of the Italian painters: half tones, ocher-yellow, Veronese green and Burgundy red. He was particularly interested in the depiction of architecture and was skillful in representing his figures and their settings in perspective. //


Category Artists
Artists by letter C
Artist nationality Flemish