- sée de Cluny (1877); Staircase of Opera
House in Paris (1881); Room in Palace of the Senate (1882); do. (1883); Gallery of Busts, ib. (1884); Library of Chamber of Deputies (1885); View of Château d'Ecouen, Interior in same, Palais de la Legion d'Honneur, Paris.—Bellier, ii. 154; Chronique des Arts (1886), 85.
NAZON, (FRANÇOIS) HENRI, born at
Réalmont (Tarn), Dec. 25, 1821. Landscape
painter, pupil of Gleyre, though he
paints in Corot's style. Medals in 1864,
1866. Works: Border of the Tarn; do. of
the Seine; Rocks at Caylus; Banks of the
Aveyron in Autumn (1863), Luxembourg
Museum.—Bellier, ii. 154; Gaz. des B.
Arts (1869), i. 508; Meyer, Gesch., 788.
NEAGLE, JOHN, born in Boston in
1799, died in 1865. Portrait painter, self-taught.
Painted in Philadelphia, Lexington,
Ky., and New Orleans. Works: Patrick
Lyon the Blacksmith (1826), and portrait
of Gilbert Stuart, Athenæum, Boston;
Portraits of Henry Clay, Union League Club,
Philadelphia; Washington, Independence
Hall, ib.; Pat Lyon at the Forge, and portrait
of Henry Cary, Pennsylvania Academy,
ib.
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NEAL, DAVID, born at Lowell, Mass., in
1837. History painter;
after working as
a wood-engraver he
went to Munich in
1861, and became a
pupil of the Royal
Bavarian Academy;
studied under his
father-in-law, the
Chevalier Ainmuller,
in 1862, and under
Piloty in 1869-76. Has lived and painted
many years in Munich. Exhibits in London,
Munich, and New York. Great medal,
Royal Bavarian Academy, 1876. Visited
New York in 1884. Works: Chapel of the
Kings at Westminster (F. Cutting, Boston);
St. Mark's—Venice (1869), S. Nickerson,
Chicago; Return from the Chase (1870),
John Bloodgood, New York; James Watt
(1874), Sir B. S. Phillips, London; Burgomaster;
First Meeting of Mary Stuart and
Rizzio (1876), D. O. Mills, New York; Oliver
Cromwell visits Milton (1884), Hurlbut
Collection, Cleveland.—Kunst-Chronik,
xviii. 354.
NEALCES or NEOCLES, Greek painter,
of Sicyon, about 250 B.C. He ranks among
the best painters of the Neo-Sicyonic school.
Pliny mentions (xxxv. [138]) a Venus by
him, also a Battle on the Nile between the
Persians and the Egyptians. Plutarch relates
(Arat. 13) how he saved a picture by
Melanthius, about to be destroyed by Aratus,
by painting out the figure of Aristratus
the tyrant.—R.-R., Schorn, 367; Brunn, ii.
290.
NEAPOLI, FRANCISCO. See Aregio,
Pablo de.
NEARCHUS or NICŒARCHUS, painter,
father of Aristarete, date and country unknown.
Pliny says (xxxv. 40 [141]) he
painted a Venus attended by Cupids and
Graces, and a Repentant Hercules.—Brunn,
ii. 300.
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NECK, JOHAN VAN, born at Naarden
in 1636, died in Amsterdam in 1714. Dutch
school; history and portrait painter, pupil
of Jacob Backer. Works: Anatomical Lesson
(1683), Museum, Amsterdam; Simeon
in the Temple, Catholic Church, ib.; do.,
Moltke Collection,
Copenhagen;
Image of
Pan by a Grove, Dresden Gallery; Portrait,
Historical Society, New York.—Immerzeel,
ii. 257; Kramm, iv. 1190.
NEEFFS (Neefs, Neffs, Nefs), PEETER,
the elder, born probably in Antwerp between
1578 and 1582, died there after Feb.
26, 1656. Flemish school; unrivalled painter
of church interiors; best pupil of Hendrik
van Steenwyck, the elder; entered the
Antwerp Guild in 1609. The figures in his
pictures generally by Frans Francken III.,
Teniers, Brueghel, and Van Thulden. This
painter had great knowledge of aërial and