On his return to Vienna, he became a successful professional painter, producing numerous portraits.
She produced portraits of everyone from celebrities to middle-class families to carnival performers.
This influence faded in later life, when he produced relatively conventional portraits.
In the 1930's, Kanaga, who was white, began to produce portraits of black people.
Many were forced to produce portraits or genre scenes, which sold much more easily.
He was also a prolific book illustrator, and produced several portraits as well.
In the early 1880s he returned to art producing religious paintings and portraits.
Like many photographers, he produced portraits as well as commercial work.
Three women painters also produced portraits using the convention of the sitter in character.
At the short end, the lens could produce passable portraits.