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・ Alfred Eichner
・ Alfred Eick
・ Alfred Eidel
・ Alfred Einhorn
・ Alfred Einstein
・ Alfred Eisenack
・ Alfred Eisenbeisser
・ Alfred Eisenstaedt
・ Alfred Eissler
・ Alfred Elcome
・ Alfred Eliab Buck
・ Alfred Elis Törnebohm
・ Alfred Elisha Ames
・ Alfred Ellet Hitchner
・ Alfred Elliott
Alfred Elmore
・ Alfred Eluère
・ Alfred Elwes
・ Alfred Ely
・ Alfred Ely Beach
・ Alfred Embarrato
・ Alfred Emmott, 1st Baron Emmott
・ Alfred Emuejeraye
・ Alfred Engelsen
・ Alfred Enneper
・ Alfred Enoch
・ Alfred Eriksen
・ Alfred Eriksen (fencer)
・ Alfred Ernest Allnatt
・ Alfred Ernest Cousins


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Alfred Elmore : ウィキペディア英語版
Alfred Elmore

Alfred Elmore RA (1815–1881) was a Victorian history and genre painter. He was born in Cork, Ireland, the son of Dr. John Richard Elmore, a surgeon who retired from the British Army to Clonakilty.
His family moved to London, where Elmore studied at the Royal Academy of Arts. His early works were in the ''troubadour'' style of Richard Parkes Bonington, but he soon graduated to religious work, notably ''The Martyrdom of Thomas à Becket'', commissioned by Daniel O'Connell for Westland Row Church in Dublin. Between 1840 and 1844 Elmore travelled across Europe, visiting Munich, Venice, Bologna, and Florence.
Elmore seems to have been associated with The Clique, a group of young artists who saw themselves as followers of Hogarth and David Wilkie. According to his friend William Powell Frith he was member of the group, but since it was most active while he was in continental Europe, his involvement was probably short-lived.
Most of Elmore's later works were historical narrative paintings. ''Religious Controversy'' and ''The Novice'' were implicitly anti-Catholic in character. Other paintings set episodes from Shakespeare, or the history of the French Revolution. They often contained subtle explorations of the process of creation, most importantly his two paintings about technological innovation, ''The Invention of the Stocking Loom'' (1847, Nottingham Castle Museum) and ''The Invention of the Combing Machine'' (1862, Cartwright Hall, Bradford). Both portray the process of industrialisation by depicting picturesque pre-industrial handicrafts. The inventor is supposed to be pondering these manual skills while he forms in his mind a mechanism to replace them.
Elmore's best-known work is ''On the Brink'' (1865; Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge), a moral genre painting depicting a young woman who has lost her money gambling, and is 'on the brink' of responding to the blandishments of a seducer, who is depicted as a satan-like figure, luridly bathed in red light, and whispering corrupting thoughts in her ear.
By the late 1860s Elmore was moving away from such Hogarthian subjects towards a more classical style influenced by Edward Poynter and Lawrence Alma-Tadema. He also painted Arabic figures, in line with the vogue for Orientalism in art.
Elmore suffered from neuralgia through much of his life, and in his late years he became lame following a fall from his horse. He died of cancer in January 1881 and was buried in Kensal Green cemetery in London.
==References==

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