Daphne Alazraki Fine Art
New York

Works Available By
- Mary Abbott
- Richard Anuszkiewicz
- Milton Avery
- Alice Baber
- Vladimir (Yosl) Bergner
- Bernardus Johannes Blommers
- Camille Bombois
- Stanley Boxer
- André Brasilier
- Maurice Brianchon
- Cornelis Johannes de Bruyn
- David Burliuk
- Yvonne Canu
- Jean Jules Louis Cavaillès
- Dan Christensen
- Thomas Sidney Cooper
- Edouard Léon Cortès
- Gene Davis
- Olivier Debré
- Georges d'Espagnat
- Jim Dine
- Jean-Gabriel Domergue
- Raoul Dufy
- Marcel Dyf
- Sam Francis
- François Gall
- Michael Goldberg
- Adolph Gottlieb
- Armand Guillaumin
- André Hambourg
- Carl Robert Holty
- Paul Jenkins
- Herman Frederik Carel ten Kate
- Alex Katz
- Achille Laugé
- Marie Laurencin
- Henri Lebasque
- Léon Augustin L'Hermitte
- Judith Lindbloom
- John Little
- Gustave Loiseau
- Conrad Marca-Relli
- Jacques Martin-Ferrières
- Ferdinand Loyen du Puigaudeau
- Léon Richet
- Jay Rosenblum
- Judith Rothschild
- Théodore Rousseau
- Egon Schiele
- Julian Stanczak
- George Clarkson Stanfield
- Alice Kent Stoddard
- Georges Terzian
- Raymond Thibesart
- Suzanne Valadon
- Louis Valtat
- Willem van de Velde the Elder
- Paul Wonner
Edouard Léon Cortès
(French, 1882 – 1969)
Edouard Léon Cortès was a French painter known for his idealized, Impressionistic scenes of Parisian streets and rural French villages. Though Cortès was decades younger than the first generation of Impressionist painters like Claude Monet, his paintings are more aligned with the earlier generation than they are to his Post-Impressionist peers André Derain or Henri Matisse. Born on April 26, 1882 in Lagny-sur-Marne, his father was the artist Antonio Cortés Cordero, who served as a painter at the royal court of Spain. He went on to study at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris in 1899, and in 1915, he was awarded the Silver Medal at the Société des Artistes Français, and then the Gold Medal at the Salon des Indépendants. Today, the majority of ...
