The Beggars of Burgos | |
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Artist | Gustave Doré |
Year | 1875 |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Dimensions | 64 cm × 119 cm (25 in × 47 in) |
Location | Private collection |
The Beggars of Burgos (Les mendiants de Burgos) is an oil-on-canvas painting created in 1875 by French artist Gustave Doré. It was sold in 2012 by Galerie Michel Descours. It is now in a private collection. [1]
The Beggars of Burgos shows a group of Castilian beggars clustered before a whitewashed wall as though they have assembled for a portrait. Most are dressed in tattered blankets, threadbare shawls, and disheveled clothing, though some wear colorful sashes and hats. A young mother, perhaps a recent widow, sits alone holding her infant. A crippled man lies in a small wooden wagon, his hands wrapped in leather or rags. Near the center, a tall man leans on walking sticks; one family with two small children stands to his left, while a couple sprawl on the sidewalk with an infant and a dog. Other beggars seen at the edges of the painting include a woman with a tambourine and several men who may have once been soldiers or tradesmen fallen on hard times. [2]
This article contains public domain text from the CDC as cited.
The Beggars of Burgos | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Artist | Gustave Doré |
Year | 1875 |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Dimensions | 64 cm × 119 cm (25 in × 47 in) |
Location | Private collection |
The Beggars of Burgos (Les mendiants de Burgos) is an oil-on-canvas painting created in 1875 by French artist Gustave Doré. It was sold in 2012 by Galerie Michel Descours. It is now in a private collection. [1]
The Beggars of Burgos shows a group of Castilian beggars clustered before a whitewashed wall as though they have assembled for a portrait. Most are dressed in tattered blankets, threadbare shawls, and disheveled clothing, though some wear colorful sashes and hats. A young mother, perhaps a recent widow, sits alone holding her infant. A crippled man lies in a small wooden wagon, his hands wrapped in leather or rags. Near the center, a tall man leans on walking sticks; one family with two small children stands to his left, while a couple sprawl on the sidewalk with an infant and a dog. Other beggars seen at the edges of the painting include a woman with a tambourine and several men who may have once been soldiers or tradesmen fallen on hard times. [2]
This article contains public domain text from the CDC as cited.