
Mont Blanc
Tones: Sky Blue, Sand, Russet, Olive, Seaweed
About The Print:Â Mont Blanc, still covered in melting snow, rises above a green valley under a blue summer sky. Oil on canvas.
About The Artist: Régnault Sarasin was a French painter and illustrator known for his contributions to academic art in the late 19th century. Trained in the traditional techniques of the École des Beaux-Arts, Sarasin's work often depicted classical themes, historical scenes, and portraits with a refined, academic style. Though not widely remembered today, he exhibited at the Paris Salon, where his paintings were noted for their technical precision and adherence to academic conventions. Though lesser-known today, his work captures the rich visual language of his era and aesthetics of the French academic tradition during a time of transition toward modernism.
Tones: Sky Blue, Sand, Russet, Olive, Seaweed
About The Print:Â Mont Blanc, still covered in melting snow, rises above a green valley under a blue summer sky. Oil on canvas.
About The Artist: Régnault Sarasin was a French painter and illustrator known for his contributions to academic art in the late 19th century. Trained in the traditional techniques of the École des Beaux-Arts, Sarasin's work often depicted classical themes, historical scenes, and portraits with a refined, academic style. Though not widely remembered today, he exhibited at the Paris Salon, where his paintings were noted for their technical precision and adherence to academic conventions. Though lesser-known today, his work captures the rich visual language of his era and aesthetics of the French academic tradition during a time of transition toward modernism.
Original: $16.00
-65%$16.00
$5.60Description
Tones: Sky Blue, Sand, Russet, Olive, Seaweed
About The Print:Â Mont Blanc, still covered in melting snow, rises above a green valley under a blue summer sky. Oil on canvas.
About The Artist: Régnault Sarasin was a French painter and illustrator known for his contributions to academic art in the late 19th century. Trained in the traditional techniques of the École des Beaux-Arts, Sarasin's work often depicted classical themes, historical scenes, and portraits with a refined, academic style. Though not widely remembered today, he exhibited at the Paris Salon, where his paintings were noted for their technical precision and adherence to academic conventions. Though lesser-known today, his work captures the rich visual language of his era and aesthetics of the French academic tradition during a time of transition toward modernism.





















