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- Lucie-Charlotte Attinger (1 March 1859 – 10 June 1928) was a Swiss painter and illustrator. Lucie Attinger was born on 1 March 1859 in Neuchâtel, Switzerland, one of eight children of James Attinger (1818-1885), son of the founder of the Attinger publishing house. In Neuchâtel she studied art under and , then attended the Académie Julian in Paris. At the Paris Salon of 1889, she exhibited her painting Mon Atelier ("My Studio"), which depicts a life class at the Académie Julian. It is one of only two known paintings (the other being Marie Bashkertseff’s In the Studio) to depicts such a class at the Académie. Mon Atelier includes a self-portrait of Attinger sketching the viewer of the painting. In 1893, Attinger married Henri Busquet de Caument (1859-1937), a member of a French aristocratic family she met at a showing of her work. They had two daughters. Attinger illustrated a number of prints for , in the style of Épinal prints. In the 1890s she was an illustrator for a number of French magazines: , (under the name Nell), and L'Éclipse and (both under the name Jattin). She also illustrated a number of books: Chansons des nos Grand'mères (1889) by , Quatre petites filles heureuses (1892) by , and Contes choisis (1893) and Alte Volks- und Kinderlieder (1910) by Christoph von Schmid. Lucie Attinger died in Neuilly-sur-Seine on 10 June 1928. (en)
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rdfs:comment
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- Lucie-Charlotte Attinger (1 March 1859 – 10 June 1928) was a Swiss painter and illustrator. Lucie Attinger was born on 1 March 1859 in Neuchâtel, Switzerland, one of eight children of James Attinger (1818-1885), son of the founder of the Attinger publishing house. In Neuchâtel she studied art under and , then attended the Académie Julian in Paris. In 1893, Attinger married Henri Busquet de Caument (1859-1937), a member of a French aristocratic family she met at a showing of her work. They had two daughters. Lucie Attinger died in Neuilly-sur-Seine on 10 June 1928. (en)
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