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‘Georges de La Tour’ Review: An Artist Veiled in Shadow is the name of the image.
After painting images of human folly, La Tour turned to the deeply spiritual
"While artists’ reputations can sometimes decline after their deaths, rare is the case of someone falling into total obscurity. Yet such was the fate of Georges de La Tour (1593-1652), who found fame and fortune in life, but who upon his death was quickly forgotten. So total was the oblivion that surviving works were often attributed to other artists, including one in the Prado, originally thought to have been painted by Francisco de Zurbarán. La Tour was not rediscovered until 1915, when a German academic with a penchant for working in the byways of art history published an article on the artist, laying the foundation for future scholarship.
The Prado’s retrospective, organized by the museum’s Andrés Ubeda and the Louvre’s Dimitri Salmon, brings together about 30 of the roughly 40 paintings securely attributed to La Tour. While richly satisfying in its career overview and the array of masterpieces it provides, the show leaves one more curious about the artist than ever before."
I found the image after reverse searching, hope this helped a bit.
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I'm thinking about latex paint and acrylic paint
D. British Columbia, I think. I'm not 100% sure though. Hope that helps.
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Dim the lights, not too much, just noticeably dimmed. Have sheets waving slowly to imitate wind and the have stage-hands run their hands left to right (audience perspective) across the screen behind the stage, but out of the view of the audience and actors. Depending on the scene, use dark gray or silver ribbons being blown the same direction as the stage hands behind the screen. Slow showers of light glitter from a catwalk with work as well, but it could effect the actors.