Vierge, Daniel Urrabieta
Related Category: European Art, 1600 to the Present: Biographies
(dänyĕl´

räbyā´tä vyār´hā), 18511904, Spanish illustrator. He went to Paris before 1870 and won recognition for his drawings of scenes of the Commune of Paris. He worked for the
Monde illustré and the
Vie moderne, and he illustrated works of Hugo, Zola, Poe, and Quevedo. Most famous, however, are his illustrations for
Don Quixote (4 vol., 19067). Paralyzed on his right side at the age of 30, Vierge learned to draw with his left hand. His pen-and-ink drawings had a marked influence on the art of modern illustration.