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  1. Lost Illusions (French: Illusions Perdues) is a painting by Charles Gleyre and his student Leon Dussart, commissioned by William Thompson Walters in 1865.

    • 86.5 cm × 150.5 cm (34.1 in × 59.3 in)
    • Charles Gleyre
    • between 1865 and 1867
  2. An aging poet watches pensively as a mysterious boat carries away his youthful dreams and illusions, personified by music-making maidens and a cupid strewing flowers. Although the figures in the painting wear classical Greek dress, their vessel resembles a "dahabieh," an Egyptian river boat.

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  4. Feb 7, 2010 · For an entire century, one of his works, the atmospheric “Evening, or Lost Illusions” (1843) was a must-see in the Louvre and was widely reproduced as a print. It was even mentioned in A la Recherche du Temps Perdu by Marcel Proust, who described the new moon in the painting as “clearly cutting out a silver sickle in the sky.”

  5. Written between 1837 and 1843, Lost Illusions reveals, perhaps better than any other of Balzac's ninety-two novels, the nature and scope of his genius.

    • (234)
    • Honore de Balzac
  6. Lost Illusions (French: French: Illusions Perdues) is a painting by Charles Gleyre and his student Leon Dussart, commissioned by William Thompson Walters in 1865. History Charles Gleyre was known as an artist of classic methods but romantic tastes who often modified heroism into idyllic scenes.

  7. Lost Illusions’ was created in 1843 by Charles Gleyre in Academicism style. Find more prominent pieces of allegorical painting at Wikiart.org – best visual art database.

  8. Jul 7, 2019 · The painting was named after the 1843 novel Lost Illusions by Honoré de Balzac, about a plucky journalist-turned-poet who disgraces himself and ruins the lives of those around him. July 7, 2019. Uncategorized. Scott Listfield, St. Paul’s, 2019 Jeremy Geddes, A Perfect Vacuum, 2011. Leave a Reply.

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