Antique Painting Collection


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all their artwork in this catagory.

Affleck, William

Albrecht, Kurt
Andrews, Ambrose
Ballesio, Giuseppe
Bennett, Frank Moss
Boddington, Edwin Henry
Byles, William
Capeinick, Jean
Carlier, Max
Caser, Ettore
Clare, Oliver
Clare, Vincent
Coleman, Frank
Collins, Charles
Cunaeus, Conradyn
Damschroeder, JJM
Daynes-Grassot, Suzanne
De Paredes, Vincent
Dommersen, Pieter C.
Downing, Delapore
Gallon, Robert
Goodall, Frederick
Grant, Gordon Hope
Hawthorne, Charles
Hayllar, Janes
Hemelman, A. B.
Herberte, Edward
Hermanns, Heinrich
Hess, Marcel
Hooper, John H
Hughes, Talbot
Jacobs, Adolphe
Jacobsen, Antonio
Janssens, Rene
Knowles, George S.
Kuwasseg, Charles E.
Laudy, Jean
Lee-Hankey, William
Levigne, Theodore
Lipscombe, Guy
Maes, Jacques
Maggs, John C
Meyer, Frederick W
Montague, Alfred
Mortelmans, Frans
Mottard, Leonie
Norretranders, J
Parker, Henry H.
Richter, Herbert D.
Rosen, Ernest
Schafer, Henry
Shayer, Henry
Sieffert, Paul
Spohler, Jan Jacob
Stanfield, George C
Thompson, George A.
Thornley, William
Thors, Joseph
Toussaint, Fernand
Van Couver, Jan
Van Sluys, Remi
Verbrugghe, Charles
Vernon, Emile
Walsh, Lucie
Waugh, Frederick
Wheeler, Alfred
Williams, Albert
Williams, William of Plymouth
Wymer, Reginald
Yates, Gideon
Zuber-Buhler, Fritz


Max Carlier

Carlier

Artist: Max Carlier
Title: Rose Still Life
Medium: Oil on Canvas 39" x 25"


MAX (ALBERT) CARLIER
(1872-1938)

Max Albert Carlier was born in Tourcoing, France of Belgian parents on May 25, 1872.  He was a painter of flower and still life paintings, genre, animals, nudes and interiors. 

Carlier worked extensively in Brussels and also traveled a great deal to Italy. He also lived for a short while in Brittany, France.

He is now known as one of the finest still life painters of the Belgian school and today, his paintings are highly sought after.  He is listed in the “Deux Siecles de Signature d’Artistes de Belgique”.

Today, his paintings can be found in many important private and public collections, worldwide, including the Museum of Ostend in Belgium.

Carlier died in Brussels on March 2, 1938.