#François Ollivier
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Rosa, 2016
François Ollivier
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National Geographic, François Ollivier
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Winter poetry by François Ollivier (Website | Behance)
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François Ollivier
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Parallel Lines, François Ollivier
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François Ollivier | Pénitents du Beluga (2016)
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ca. 1766-1769 Maria Walpole, Duchess of Gloucester by ? (Virginia Museum of Fine Arts - Richmond, Virginia, USA). From history-of-fashion.tumblr.com/post/159078324404/ab-1766-1769-nathaniel-dance-holland-portrait 931X1200 @72 356kj.
1766 Comtesse Marie-Louise de Beaurepaire by Louis-Michel Van Loo (auctioned by Sotheby's). From their Web site; increased exposure 2167X2834 @150 7.6Mp.
From 1765 until 1766 Elisabeth Sulzer by Anton Graff (location ?). From Wikimedia via pinterest.com/SannaMaK/18th-century-fur-trim/ 1677X2000 @72 1Mj.
From 1765 until 1766 Elisabeth Sulzer by Anton Graff (location ?). From Wikimedia via pinterest.com/SannaMaK/18th-century-fur-trim/ 1677X2000 @72 1Mj.
ca. 1766 Mrs. Barnard Elliott, Jr. (Mary Elizabeth Bellinger Elliott) by Jeremiah Theus (Gibbes Museum of Art - Charleston, South Carolina, USA). From Wikimedia 2461X3001 @38pixels/cm 2.7Mj.
1766 Archduchess Maria Christina, Duchess of Teschen by Marcello Bacciarelli (Kunsthistorisches Museum - Wien, Austria). From Wikimedia 1828X2608 @300 1.3Mj.
1766 Annette, Comtesse de Vergennes in Oriental Costume by Antoine de Favray (private collection). From Google Art Project via Wikimedia 1974X2026 @97 3.5Mj.
1766 (?) Madame Bergeret by François Boucher (National Gallery of Art - Washington, DC, USA). From their Web site 2999X4096 #72 3.9Mj.
1766 Fête donnée par le prince de Conti au Prince héréditaire Charles Guillaume Ferdinand de Brunswick-Lunebourg by Michel Barthélemy Ollivier entire scene (Châteaux de Versailles et de Trianon - Versailles, Île-de-France, France)1117X.840 @96 414kj.
1766 Fête donnée par le prince de Conti au Prince héréditaire Charles Guillaume Ferdinand de Brunswick-Lunebourg by Michel Barthélemy Ollivier right center (Châteaux de Versailles et de Trianon - Versailles, Île-de-France, France) 1137X.852 @96 261kj
#1766 fashion#Rococo fashion#Georgian fashion#Louis XV fashion#Maria Walpole#Marie-Louise de Beaurepaire#Louis-Michel Van Loo#Elisabeth Sulzer#Anton Graff#Jeremiah Theus#Archduchess Maria Christina#Marcello Bacciarelli#Comtesse de Vergennes#turquerie#orientalism#Antoine de Favray#Madame Bergeret#Michel Barthélemy Ollivier#picnic scene
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Bosquet c’est le travail de personnes talentueuses et passionnées. Un immense merci à chacun de vous :
Cybèle B. Pilon, Lian Benoit, Julie Bouchet, Élisabeth Charbonneau, Jessica Charbonneau, Françoise Cournoyer, Amanda Craig, Eugénie Crevier, Valérie Darveau, Soleil Denault, Amalia Fieuzal, Mathieu Fortin, Virginie Gosselin, Angela Grauerholz, Nancy Guignard, Gaëlle Janvier, Jeanne Joly, Jasmine Kabuya-Racine, Xavier Kronström Richard, Marie-Michel Lalonde, Justine Lambert, Patricia Lanoie, Léonie Lévesque, Caroline Magar, Josée Massé, Roxane Mercier-Boucher, Aless MC, Jérémy Noël, François Ollivier, Audrey PM, Mariève Pelletier, Charlotte Ratel, Soukayna, Sandrine V. Bourque et Charlotte Williams
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Juventude
O jovem François-Marie Arouet era recebido nos melhores salões de Paris, como o salão do Templo e resolveu não ser advogado nem membro do Parlamento. Em 1718 adoptou o pseudónimo Voltaire e dedicou-se à tragédia e à epopeia.
Pintura de Michel-Barthélémy Ollivier: “O chá à Inglesa no Salão do Templo”, com Mozart ao piano e tudo.
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Le Vent, Los Angeles, 2016
François Ollivier
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National Geometric, François Ollivier
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HMS "Amelia" and the French Frigate "Aréthuse" in Action 1813 by John Christian Schetky 1852
In January 1813 Lieutenant Pascoe had to run his gunbrig Daring on shore and burn her at the island of Tamara, Iles de Los, after being chased by three French vessels. Two days later he and part of his crew arrived in the river of Sierra Leone where HMS Amelia 38- guns, she was once a French frigate with the name Proserpine , was about to leave for England, with many of her crew debilitated with fever and barely fit for duty after more than 12 months on the station. Before leaving, Captain Irby sent Lieutenant Pascoe off in a small schooner to reconnoitre.
Pascoe reported back on 3 February that he had sighted a force consisting of three ships. Two were the French frigates Aréthuse, 40- guns (Captain Pierre Bouvet), and Rubis, 40- guns (Commander Louis-François Ollivier). The third ship was a Portuguese prize, La Serra, which they were unloading before sailing to intercept British merchant vessels, a convoy from England being expected daily. The master and the rest of the crew from Daring arrived in a cartel, having given their parole, and confirmed Lieutenant Pascoe's report. Standing in towards Tamara on 6 February, Captain Irby met the government schooner Princess Charlote and learnt that the two frigates were anchored a considerable distance apart. Although he was not aware of it, Rubis, the southernmost one, had struck a rock, which had disabled her. Aréthuse weighed and stood out to sea followed by Amelia, Captain Irby having hopes of enticing her into action. For nearly four hours they exchanged fire, throughout which Aréthuse used the usual French practice of firing high. Having cut Amelia's sails and running and standing rigging to pieces, the French ship bore up. Twice during the action the enemy had attempted to board but the marines, under the command of Lieutenant Simpson of the Royal Marines, drove them back. The whole affair came not to a happy end, however, as both captains later accused each other of having fled.
The British losses were heavy, with 46 killed, including Lieutenants John Bates, John Pope and George Wills, Lieutenant William Pascoe, the commander of Daring, and Second Lieutenant R G Grainger, Royal Marines. Five more men died of their wounds later. Fifty-one were dangerously or seriously wounded, and 44 slightly wounded. Captain Irby appointed Lieutenant Reeve, invalided and wounded several times in the action, as his first lieutenant, and master's mates Samuel Umfreville and Edward Robinson (who had been severely wounded) as second and third. Mr Williamson, the surgeon, his assistant Mr Burke and Mr Stewart of Daring cared for the wounded as the crippled Amelia made her way north towards Madeira and then home, arriving at Spithead on 22 March.
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