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  1. Työskentelyä Académie Julianissa 1889. Académie Julian oli ranskalainen yksityinen taidekoulu Pariisissa, jonka perusti taidemaalari Rodolphe Julian vuonna 1867.Se oli myös monien suomalaistaiteilijoiden suosiossa. Académie Julianin perustamisen aikaan Ranskan viralliset taidekoulut kuten École des Beaux-Arts eivät hyväksyneet naisia oppiinsa, koska esimerkiksi alastonmallien ...

  2. Académie Julian was founded in 1867 in Montmartre, offering students studies of live models and sessions of corrections with well-reputed artists. In 1880, a course for women was created. In 1885, the school had four hundred female students. The Académie would play an important role in the formation of American artists, from North and South.

  3. Fonds de l'Académie Julian (1890-1932). Archives Nationales Françaises, cote 63 AS 1 à 9; Gabriel P. Weisberg, Viviane Guybert L'Académie Julian au XIX e siècle dans Univers des Arts Salon 2012 Société des Artistes français, p. 12-27, n° hors-série numéro 21, novembre 2012. Marie Bashkirtseff, Journal, Ed, Eugène Fasquelle, 1928

  4. Académie Julian was established in 1867 by Rodolphe Julian. Sent by his father, a tobacco merchant, young Julian ventured to Marseille to work as a clerk in a bookstore. Possessing a natural talent for drawing, he eventually made his way to Paris. Under the mentorship of two professors Léon Cogniet and Alexandre Cabanel at the École des ...

  5. Find a list of greatest artists associated with Académie Julian, Paris, France at Wikiart.org – the best visual art database.

  6. Académie Julian was even more significant for the careers of women artists.14 After the reorganization caused by the Revolution at the end of the eighteenth century the Academy stopped accepting women. While until this date a total of four women could be accepted if judged 'exceptional' by the king, in the new era they were formally excluded ...

  7. The Académie Julian was founded in Paris in 1868, initially to prepare students for entry to the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, the nineteenth-century's preeminent art school. Because women could not study at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts until 1897, Julian itself became an international equivalent for many of the late nineteenth- and early twentieth ...