Poppins shop high-quality art prints on canvas

Stevens high-quality art prints on canvas

By theme ↴

Classic ↴

Unclassified

A to C ↴

Aagaard

Abbey

Achenbach

Agache

Airy

Aivazovsky

Alexander

Allingham

Alma-Tadema

Alma-Tadema - Anna

Almeida

Alt

Altson

Amberg

Amerling

Amiet

Amoedo

Ancher

Anderson

Andreotti

Anguissola

Anker

Anquetin

Apol

Archer

Arkhipov

Armfield

Arnegger

Arnesby Brown

Arntzenius

Bache

Backer

Baes

Bail

Bakalowicz

Barlow

Bashkirtseff

Bastien-Lepage

Bateman

Batten

Bauer

Bechi

Beck

Beckett

Beers

Bell

Bellei

Benczur

Béraud

Bergh

Bernard

Bianchi

Biéler

Bierstadt

Bilinska-Bohdanowicz

Birch

Birger

Birney

Bisson

Björck

Blaas

Blache

Blacklock

Blacklock, William

Blanche

Blashfield

Böcklin

Bogdanov-Belsky

Boks

Boldini

Bonheur

Bonnard

Bonnat

Bonnier

Botke

Botticelli

Boudin

Bough

Boughton

Bouguereau

Boutet de Monvel

Boutibonne

Bramley

Brandeis

Brangwyn

Brate

Breakspeare

Bréanski

Bredt

Breitner

Brendekilde

Breton

Brett

Brewtnall

Bricher

Bridgman

Brockhurst

Broge

Bronzino

Brown

Browne

Browne, Matilda

Browning

Bruegel

Brull i Vinyoles

Brush

Bukovac

Buland

Bulleid

Bunce

Bunny

Burgess

Burne-Jones

Burton

Butler

Cabanel

Cadell

Caffi

Caffieri

Caillebotte

Calderon

Callow

Cameron

Campo

Canaletto

Caravaggio

Cariot

Carlisle

Carolus-Duran

Carpentier

Carrier-Belleuse

Carrière

Casas

Cassatt

Cazin

Cézanne

Chabas

Chalfant

Chaplin

Charlemont

Charreton

Chase

Chelminski

Chmielinski

Choultsé

Ciani

Ciardi

Clairin

Clark

Claus

Clausen

Clifford

Cole

Cole GV

Cole T

Coleman CC

Coleman WS

Collier

Collins

Collinson

Comerre

Compton

Cookesley

Coomans

Cooper

Cope

Corbet

Corcos

Corder

Corot

Corrodi

Cortes

Cortès

Cosimo

Costa

Cot

Cotard-Dupré

Cour

Couture

Cowper

Crane

Cressini

Croegaert

Cucuel

Curran

D to G ↴

Da Vinci

Dadd

Dagnan-Bouveret

Dahl

Dalsgaard

Danielson-Gambogi

Dantan

Darnaut

Daubigny

Davidson

Dawson

Debat-Ponsan

DeCamp

Degas

Degouve

Delaroche

Delpy

Delville

Denner

Derain

Detmold

Deutsch

Deverell

Dewing

Dicksee

Dinet

Dodson

Dore Gustave

Doyle

Drachmann

Draper

Duhem

Dulac

Duncan

Dupré

Durer

Duveneck

Dvořák

Dyce

Eakins

East

Eckersberg

Economou

Edelfelt

Egg

Egley

Eicken

Ekström

Ekwall

Elsley

Elwell

Enjolras

Enwonwu

Ernst (Rudolf)

Eversen

Exner

Fabry

Faed

Falero

Fantin-Latour

Farquharson

Favorin

Fechin

Ferenczy

Fergusson

Ferrier

Feure

Firle

Firmin-Girard

Fischer

Fitzgerald

Fjaestad

Flint

Forbes

Ford

Fortescue-Brickdale

Foster

Fowler

Fox

Frampton

Frédéric

Frere

Friant

Friedrich

Frieseke

Friesz

Frith

Frost

Fuller

Gabriël

Gale

Galien-Laloue

Gallen-Kallela

Gambogi

Garber

García

Garden

Gardner

Gaskin

Gemmell

Genth

Geoffroy

Gerome

Gervex

Giacometti

Giani

Gilbert

Gleyre

Goble

Godward

Goeneutte

Goetze

Goodall

Goodman

Goodwin

Gotch

Graner

Graner Y Arrufi

Grant

Grigoriev

Grimm

Grimshaw

Guérard-Gonzalès

Guillaumin

Guillemet

Guillou

Guirand

Gunn

Guthrie

Guy

H to L ↴

Haag

Hacker

Hagborg

Haigh-Wood

Hale

Hall

Hallé

Halonen

Hamilton

Hammershøi

Hankey

Hansen

Harcourt

Hare

Harlamoff

Harpignies

Harrison

Harvey

Hassam

Hatton

Hawkins

Hawksley

Hayez

Hayllar

Hedley

Helleu

Henner

Hennessy

Henningsen

Henri

Henry

Herbert

Herbo

Herkomer

Herter

Heyerdahl

Hicks

Hills

Hiroshige

Hirsch-Pauli

Hitchcock

Hodler

Hokusai

Holbien

Holiday

Holl

Holsøe

Homer

Hornel

Horsley

Hublin

Hughes

Hunt

Hurt

Hynckes

Ilsted

Induno

Ingres

Irolli

Israëls

Jacquet

Jagger

Janmot

Järnefelt

Jerichau

Jiménez

Johansen

Johnson

Jones

Jonghe

Jongkind

Joy

Kaemmerer

Kamke

Kaufmann

Kelly

Kemp-Welch

Kendall

Kennington

Khnopff

Kiesel

Kilburne

King

King Cox

Kittelsen

Klever

Klinkenberg

Knight

Knopf

Knowles

Koekkoek

Koester

Korovin

Kosler

Kowalski

Kreuger

Krohg

Kronberg

Krouthén

Krøyer

Kryzhitsky

Kuhnert

Kupka

Kuroda

Kyhn

LaFarge

Lagye

Lakhovsky

Lamb

Landelle

Landseer

Lange

Langley

Lapchine

Larsson

László

Lavery

Lawson

Leader

Lear

Lebasque

Lebourg

Lefebvre

Lega

Lehmann

Leickert

Leighton

Lenbach

Lenoir

Lenz

Lépine

Leslie

Leto

Lever

Levitan

Lévy-Dhurmer

Lhermitte

Libert

Lidderdale

Liebermann

Liljefors

Lindegren

Linton

List

Locher

Loeb

Loiseau

Long

Lucas-Robiquet

Luce

Luksh-Makovskaya

Lundahl

Lyall

Lynch

M to R ↴

Macbeth

Macdowell

Maclise

Macomber

Madeline

Madox

Madrazo

Maggi

Majorelle

Malczewski

Malmström

Mancini

Manguin

Mankes

Mann

Margetson

Maris

Marks

Marquet

Marstrand

Martin

Martineau

Mathey

Maufra

Mauve

Max

Maxence

McNicoll

Melchers

Mellery

Melville

Menzel

Merle

Merritt

Merson

Metcalf

Meteyard

Meyer

Millais

Miller

Millet

Moll

Mølsted

Monsted

Mønsted

Montézin

Moore

Moran

Morbelli

Moreau

Morelli

Moret

Morgan

Morisot

Morris

Moser

Mossa

Mostyn

Mowbray

Müller

Munier

Munkácsy

Munnings

Munns

Munsterhjelm

Munthe

Murray

Muschamp

Nesterov

Nevinson

Nicholas

Nisbet

Nittis

Nonnenbruch

Normand

Normann

Nourse

Nowell

Offor

Okuń

O'Neill

Ooms

Oppenheimer

Orpen

Osbert

Osborne

Osslund

Ouderaa

Oyens

Pagliano

Palmer

Park

Parrish

Paton

Patrick

Pauli

Paulsen

Pavil

Paxton

Payne

Pearce

Pedersen

Peel

Peploe

Percy

Perrault

Perry

Perugini

Petersen

Peterson

Peterssen

Pether

Philipsen

Philpot

Pickering

Pieck

Pierneef

Piot

Pippel

Point

Pokhitonov

Polenov

Pope

Portaels

Portielje

Potthast

Poynter

Pradilla

Pratella

Prescott-Davies

Previati

Prins

Prud'hon

Pryn

Puigaudeau

Putz

Puvis

Quinsac

Rae

Raeburn

Raffaëlli

Ralli

Ranson

Raphael

Ratcliffe

Rayner

Redgrave

Redmond

Redon

Reggianini

Reichert

Reid

Reiffel

Rembrandt

Renoir

Repin

Rhead

Rheam

Richir

Richmond

Ring

Ritman

Rivière

Roberts

Robinson

Rochegrosse

Rockline

Roelofs

Roerich

Rohde

Romani

Rooke

Roosval

Rørbye

Rosa

Rose

Rossetti

Rossi

Rotari

Royer

Rubens

Ruisdael

Rusiñol

Ruskin

Ryland

Rysselberghe

S to Z ↴

Sadler

Sahlstén

Salisbury

Salmson

Salokivi

Sánchez

Sands

Sant

Santoro

Sartorio

Savage

Scheffer

Schelfhout

Schendel

Schikaneder

Schjerfbeck

Schmalz

Schønheyder

Schuhmacher

Schwabe

Schwartz

Schwartze

Seago

Segantini

Seignac

Senior

Séon

Serebriakova

Serov

Sérusier

Shannon

Sharp

Shaw

Shepherd

Shields

Shishkin

Sickert

Sidaner

Sieffert

Siemiradzki

Signac

Signorini

Sijs

Simberg

Simmons

Sims

Singer

Sirani

Sisley

Sloan

Slott-Møller

Smellie

Smetham

Smith

Solomon

Somov

Sonrel

Sorbi

Sorolla

Soulacroix

Southall

Sparre

Spartali

Speed

Spencelayh

Spiers

Spilliaert

Springer

Stanhope

Steele

Steer

Steichen

Stephens

Stevens

Stewart

Stifter

Stjernschantz

Stock

Stokes

Stone

Stott

Strang

Strudwick

Stuck

Styka

Swynnerton

Syberg

Tanoux

Tapiró

Tarbell

Tayler

Taylor

Thangue

Thaulow

Thayer

Theaker

Thesleff

Tholen

Thoma

Thorburn

Tintoretto

Tirén

Tissot

Titian

Tito

Togores

Tom-Petersen

Toorop

Tornøe

Torres

Touche

Toulmouche

Toulouse-Lautrec

Toussaint

Traquair

Triepcke

Tuke

Turner

Tuxen

Uhde

Unterberger

Ury

Utrillo

Valadon

Vasnetsov

Vedder

Veith

Verboeckhoven

Vermeer

Vermehren

Vernon

Vibert

Vinogradov

Visconti

Vlaminck

Vogeler

Vonnoh

Vrubel

Vuillard

Waay

Wachtel

Wahlberg

Wahlroos

Waldmüller

Walker

Wall Perné

Wallander

Waller

Wallis

Wardle

Warling

Warwick

Waterhouse

Waterlow

Watson

Watts

Webbe

Weert

Wegmann

Weguelin

Weir

Weiss

Weissenbruch

Welie

Wells

Wendt

Wentzel

Werenskiold

Westerholm

Wheelwright

Whistler

Wierusz-Kowalski

Wiik

Wiles

Wilhelmson

Wilhjelm

Willcox

Willems

Williams

Winterhalter

Wisinger-Florian

Wontner

Wores

Wright

Wyeth

Wyllie

Wytsman

Yeats

Yeend

Young

Zacho

Zahrtmann

Zandomeneghi

Zatzka

Zinkeisen

Zoff

Zonaro

Zorn

Zuloaga

Requests

Modern ↴

Alfred Stevens (Belgian painter) 1823 - 1906

Alfred Émile Léopold Stevens (11 May 1823 – 24 August 1906) was a Belgian painter, known for his paintings of elegant modern women. Stevens was born in Brussels. He came from a family involved with the visual arts: his older brother Joseph (1816–1892) and his son Léopold (1866–1935) were painters, while another brother Arthur (1825–1899) was an art dealer and critic. His father, who had fought in the Napoleonic wars in the army of William I of the Netherlands, was an art collector who owned several watercolors by Eugène Delacroix, among other artists. His mother's parents ran Café de l'Amitié in Brussels, a meeting place for politicians, writers, and artists. All the Stevens children benefited from the people they met there, and the social skills they acquired in growing up around important people. After the death of his father in 1837, Stevens left middle school to begin study at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, where he knew François Navez, the Neo-Classical painter and former student of Jacques-Louis David who was its director and an old friend of Stevens's grandfather. Following a traditional curriculum, he drew from casts of classical sculpture for the first two years, and then drew from live models. In 1843, Stevens went to Paris, joining his brother Joseph who already was there. He was admitted to the École des Beaux-Arts, the most important art school in Paris. Although it is said that he became a student of its director Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, this is likely not true. An early picture by Stevens, The Pardon or Absolution (Hermitage, St. Petersburg), signed and dated 1849, shows his mastery of a conventional naturalistic style which owes much to 17th-century Dutch genre painting. Like the Belgian painter and friend with whom he stayed in Paris, Florent Joseph Marie Willems (1823–1905), Stevens carefully studied works by painters such as Gerard ter Borch and Gabriel Metsu. Stevens's work was shown publicly for the first time in 1851, when three of his paintings were admitted to the Brussels Salon. He was awarded a third-class medal at the Paris Salon in 1853, and a second-class medal at the Universal Exposition in Paris in 1855. His Ce qu'on appelle le vagabondage [What is called vagrancy] (Musée d'Orsay, Paris) attracted the attention of Napoleon III who, as a result of the scene in the picture, ordered that soldiers no longer be used to pick up the poor from the streets. Two other paintings he exhibited at the Salon in Antwerp that year, Chez soi or At Home (present location unknown) and The Painter and his Model (Walters Art Museum, Baltimore), introduced subjects from "la vie moderne" for which he became known: an elegant young woman in contemporary dress and the artist in his studio. In 1857, Stevens made his first important sale to a private collector, when Consolation was bought for a rumored 6,000 francs by the Berlin collector and dealer Ravéné. At the same time, he and his brother were becoming part of the art world of Paris, meeting people such as the Goncourt brothers, Théophile Gautier, and Alexandre Dumas at the salons of Princess Mathilde as well as popular cafés. In 1858, Stevens married Marie Blanc, who came from a rich Belgian family and old friends of the Stevens's. Eugène Delacroix was a witness at the ceremony. During the 1860s, Stevens became an immensely successful painter, known for his paintings of elegant modern women. His exhibits at the Salons in Paris and Brussels attracted favorable critical attention and buyers. An excellent example of his work during this time is La Dame en Rose or Woman in Pink (Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, Brussels), painted in 1866, which combines a view of a fashionably dressed woman in an interior with a detailed examination of Japanese objects, a fashionable taste called Japonisme of which Stevens was an early enthusiast. In 1863, he received the Legion of Honor (Chevalier) from the French government. In 1867, he won a first-class medal at the Universal Exposition in Paris, where he and Jan August Hendrik Leys were the stars of the Belgian section, and was promoted to Officer of the Legion of Honor. His friends included Édouard Manet, Edgar Degas, Charles Baudelaire, Berthe Morisot, James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Frédéric Bazille, and Puvis de Chavannes, and he was a regular in the group that gathered at the Café Guerbois in Paris. Stevens fought for the French during the siege of Paris in the Franco-Prussian War, but returned to Belgium with his wife and family before the Paris Commune. They returned after the war, and Stevens continued to achieve critical acclaim as well as great success with collectors. In 1875, he bought a grand house and garden in Paris on rue des Martyrs, which appeared in his paintings as well as those of other artists, including Édouard Manet's The Croquet Party (Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main) from 1873. (He had to leave the house in 1880, however, to make way for the construction of a new street, which was named after him.) In 1878, he was made a Commander of the Legion of Honor and received another first-class medal at the Salon. Despite earning a considerable income through the sale of his paintings, Stevens found that a combination of bad investments and excessive spending caused him great financial difficulties during the 1880s. An additional expense came from summers by the sea, which a doctor told Stevens in 1880 were essential for his health. Thus the artist was glad to agree when the Paris dealer Georges Petit offered him 50,000 francs to finance his vacation in exchange for the paintings Stevens produced during that time. This deal, which lasted for three years, resulted in the sea becoming an important subject for him, and over the rest of his career, he painted hundreds of views of popular resorts along the Normandy coast and the Midi in the south. Many of them are painted in a sketchy style that shows the influence of the Impressionists. Stevens also began to take private students, including Sarah Bernhardt, who became a close personal friend, and William Merritt Chase. Other students were Berthe Art, Charles Bell Birch, Jules Cayron, Marie Collart-Henrotin, Louise De Hem, Harriet Campbell Foss, Georgette Meunier, Lilla Cabot Perry, Jean-Paul Sinibaldi, and Fernand Toussaint. The single most important work from the second half of Stevens's career is the monumental Panorama du Siècle, 1789–1889, which he painted with Henri Gervex. Stevens painted the women and details and Gervex the men, with the help of fifteen assistants. It was shown to great acclaim at the International Exhibition held in Paris in 1889. He also received several great professional tributes. In 1895, a large exhibition of his work was held in Brussels. In 1900, Stevens was honored by the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris with the first retrospective exhibition ever given to a living artist. Supported by patrons led by the Comtesse de Greffulhe, it achieved social cachet as well as popular success. In 1905, he was the only living artist allowed to exhibit in a retrospective show of Belgian art in Brussels. Despite these exhibitions, he was not able to sell enough of his work to manage well financially. Having outlived his brothers and most of his friends, he died in Paris in 1906, living alone in modest rooms. 


Share the love on...
TrustPilot badge for Poppins Shop