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La Hire (also spelled
La Hyre) was a French Baroque classical painter whose best work is marked
by gravity, simplicity, and dignity.
He was the son
of the painter Étienne de La Hire (c. 1583-1643) but was most influenced
by the work of Georges Lallemont and
Orazio Gentileschi. His picture of
Pope Nicolas V at the Tomb of Saint Francis was done in 1630 for the Capuchins,
for whom he executed several other works. For the goldsmiths' company
he produced in 1635 St Peter Healing the Sick and the Conversion of St
Paul in 1637. In 1648, with 11 other artists, he helped found the French
Royal Academy. Cardinal Richelieu called him to the Palais-Royal about
1640 to paint decorative mythological scenes, and he later designed a
series of tapestries for the Gobelins.
Works
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