followed his manner, was also a professor in the Paris Academy.—Biog. nat. de Belgique, iii. 413; Ch. Blanc, Ècole francaise; Immerzeel, i. 134; Kramm, i. 228; Michiels, ix. 279, 330.
CHAMPIGNY, Édouard Detaille, Henry
Hilton, New York. Scene, the kitchen
garden of a suburban mansion near Paris.
Gen. Faron, having retaken Champigny, a
village above the Marne, fortified the hamlet
and defended, foot by foot, the houses and
enclosed gardens, Dec. 2, 1870, against the
return attack of the Saxony and Würtemburg
Divisions. Photogravure in Art Treasures
of America, ii. 51.
CHAMPIN, JEAN JACQUES, born at
Sceaux (Seine), Sept. 8, 1796, died in Paris,
March 10, 1860. Landscape painter, pupil
of Storelli and Régnier; an excellent water-*colour
painter, and a skilful engraver. Medals:
2d class, 1824; 1st class, 1831. Works:
Coast of Provence from above Nice (1831);
Souvenirs of the Lignon (1869).—Larousse.
CHAMPNEY, JAMES WELLS, born in
Boston, Mass., July 16, 1843. Genre painter;
pupil of Edouard Frère at Écouen, France,
and of the Antwerp Academy in 1867-68.
Sketched at different times in England and
on the Continent, Africa, Nova Scotia, South
America, and in the Southern United States.
Lecturer on anatomy in the schools of the
National Academy, New York. Elected an
A.N.A in 1882. Studios in New York and
Deerfield. Works: Which is Umpire? (1871);
Sere Leaf (1874); Not so Ugly as he Looks
(1875); Your Good Health, Speak, Sir (1876);
Where the Two Paths Meet (1880); Indian
Summer (1881); Bonny Kilmeny, Boarding-school
Green-Room (1882); Pamela, Hide
and Seek, Autumn Reverie, Eunice (1884);
He loves Me (1885); Water-colours: On the
Heights, Measuring the Great Elm (1884).
CHAPEAU DE PAILLE (i.e. Poil—The
Beaver Hat), Rubens, National Gallery, London;
wood, H. 2 ft. 6 in. × 1 ft. 9 in. Portrait
of a young lady (Mdlle. Lunden?),
half-length, life-size, dressed in a black velvet
bodice with crimson sleeves, and wearing
a black Spanish beaver hat with black and
white feathers, holding her hands crossed
before her. The hat casts a shadow over the
upper part of the face, giving the painter
an opportunity of showing his skill in treating
transparent shadow. From this it was
formerly called in Belgium Het Spaansch
Hoedje (The Spanish Hat). It was in Rubens's
possession until his death (1640); at
death of his widow passed to family of Lunden,
from whom bought (1817) by Baron
Stiers d'Aertselaer for 50,000 florins; sold
at his death (1822) for 32,700 florins, and
taken to England, where it was purchased
for £3,500 by Sir Robert Peel, from whose
Collection it passed in 1871 to National Gallery.
Engraved by Tayler; Reynolds.—Smith,
ii. 32, 228; Kett, 110; Waagen, Treasures,
i. 398.
An image should appear at this position in the text. To use the entire page scan as a placeholder, edit this page and replace "{{missing image}}" with "{{raw image|Cyclopedia of painters and paintings - Volume I.djvu/310}}". Otherwise, if you are able to provide the image then please do so. For guidance, see Wikisource:Image guidelines and Help:Adding images. |
Chapeau de Paille, Rubens, National Gallery, London.
CHAPLIN, CHARLES JOSHUA, born
at Les Andelys (Eure), June 6, 1825. Figure
and portrait painter; pupil of the École
des Beaux Arts, and employed in 1860 in
decorating the Tuileries, afterwards the
rooms of the Empress in the Élysée, the
Hotel Musard, and other public and private