Armand Kohl

French illustrator From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Armand-Emile-Jean-Baptiste Kohl, (born 1845[1] Paris), was a French illustrator and prolific engraver, a student of Alexandre Falguière and Charles Laplante, and who exhibited at the Paris Salon from 1869.

Shows two coaches and a cart stationed outside hotel at Bealey on the West Coast Road, Canterbury. Distant glimpses of the Bealey River and the Southern Alps in New Zealand

His engravings were after the work of artists such as T. Taylor (fl. 1890), Achille Sirouy, Frédéric Théodore Lix (1830-1897), Wanckler, James MacLaren Barclay and Henri Zuber.[2]

Biography

Born in Paris in 1845, Armand Kohl studied under Alexandre Falguière and Laplaute.[3] He exhibited his works at the Salon (Paris) from 1869 onwards and received an honorable mention in 1888.

Books illustrated

References

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