Marie-Lambertine Coclers
Appearance
Marie-Lambertine Coclers | |
---|---|
Born | Marie-Lambertine Coclers ca. 1761 |
Died | ca. 1815 n/a |
Occupation | Painter |
Parent | Jean-Baptiste Coclers (mother) |
Marie-Lambertine Coclers (1761 – after 1815) was a pastel artist and engraver born in the Holy Roman Empire.
Born in Liège, Coclers was the daughter of Jean-Baptiste Coclers, who died during her childhood. Her instructor was her elder brother, Jean-Baptiste-Bernard Coclers; he made an etching of a young female artist at work which might depict his sister.[1] She came from a family with many artists. She worked in Amsterdam for a while and there she adapted the style of Adriaen van Ostade.
Gallery
[edit]-
Man at the door of an inn
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Two women and a man in front of a farmhouse
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Two standing peasant women, one with a child on her arm
References
[edit]- ^ Profile Archived 2023-06-05 at the Wayback Machine in the Dictionary of Pastellists Before 1800.
Categories:
- 1761 births
- Belgian women painters
- Belgian engravers
- Women engravers
- 18th-century engravers
- 19th-century Belgian painters
- 19th-century engravers
- 19th-century Belgian women artists
- Pastel artists
- 18th-century painters from the Prince-Bishopric of Liège
- Women pastel artists
- 18th-century Dutch women painters
- 18th-century Dutch painters
- 19th-century Dutch women painters
- 19th-century Dutch painters
- Belgian painter stubs
- Engraver stubs