French Post-Impressionist painter, painting gardens, cliffs, harbours or churches
author:Art training in a certain painting garden
Gustave Loiseau (3 October 1865 – 10 October 1935) was a French Post-Impressionist painter known for his landscapes and landscapes on the streets of Paris.
Loiso was born in Paris and grew up there, where his parents owned a butcher shop in Pontoise. He had an apprenticeship with a friend at home.
In 1887, when his grandmother's legacy allowed him to focus on painting, he entered the Academy of Decorative Arts to study life painting. However, a year later, he left school after arguing with his teacher.
While working as a decorator, Loiso renovated the apartment of landscape painter Fernand Quignon. He invited Fernand Quignon to instruct him in painting.
In 1890, he first came to the Arvin Bridge in Brittany, where he became brothers with artists there, especially Paul Gauguin and Emil Bernard.
After experimenting with the pointillist method, he adopted his own post-impressionist approach, depicting landscapes directly from nature. His technique, known as cross-painting, gave his work a special quality that is now recognized as his specialty.