Jules’s work is defined by its 19th century sensibility — an enduring influence on generations that followed. Most artists are dead; following is a declaration of love.

The Song of the Lark
Jules Breton (French, 1827–1906)

Untitled
André Breton French, 1896-1966

Mower Honing a Scythe
Jules Bastien-Lepage French, 1848-1884

Barks Fleeing Before the Storm
Jules Dupré (French, 1811–1889)

On the Road
Jules Dupré (French, 1811–1889)

The Cottage by the Roadside, Stormy Sky
Jules Dupré (French, 1811–1889)

"The Arts" Ewer and Basin
Jules-Paul Brateau French, 1844-1923 Paris, France

Odalisque
Jules Joseph Lefebvre (French, 1836–1912)

Hermine David
Jules Pascin American, born Bulgaria, 1885-1930

Palace Ball
Jules Pascin American, born Bulgaria, 1885-1930

Proposed Chicago Civic Center, Chicago, Illinois, Perspective
Daniel Hudson Burnham (American, 1846-1912) Edward Herbert Bennett (American, born England, 1874-1954) Jules Valée Guérin (American, 1866-1946)

Born in Snovsk
Jules Olitski American, born Russia (present-day Ukraine), 1922-2007

Claudine Resting
Jules Pascin American, born Bulgaria, 1885-1930

The Estuary Farm
Jules Dupré (French, 1811–1889)

Bacchus Consoling Ariadne
Aimé-Jules Dalou (French, 1838–1902)

View Looking West Over the City, 1909 Plan of Chicago
Jules Guerin, delineator American, 1866-1946 Edward Herbert Bennett, architect American, born England, 1874-1954 Daniel Hudson Burnham, architect American, 1846-1912

Seated Breton Woman
Paul Gauguin French, 1848-1903

Nubian Woman
Jules-Robert Auguste (French, 1789-1850)

Flatiron Building, New York, New York, Perspective
D.H. Burnham & Co. (American, 1891-1912) Jules Guerin (American, 1866-1946) Frederick P. Dinkelberg (American, 1861-1935)

Breton Bather
Paul Gauguin French, 1848-1903