Eugène Emmanuel Lemercier (1886–1915), French, A promising talent cut tragically short by war, this French painter and illustrator left behind a body of work that blended Symbolist ambiguity with a modern, almost cinematic sensibility. His canvases often explored twilight states—both literal and metaphorical—with figures emerging from or dissolving into shadow, their expressions hovering between introspection and melancholy. Though influenced by Puvis de Chavannes’s muted allegories, he infused his compositions with a sharper psychological edge, as seen in *The Watcher* (1912), where a lone figure gazes into an indistinct horizon, the brushwork blurring the boundary between observer and landscape. Drafted into World War I, he documented his experiences in letters and sketches, some later published posthumously. These works reveal a shift: the dreamlike quality of his prewar art gave way to stark, urgent lines, capturing the surreal horror of trench life. Had he survived beyond 1915, his trajectory might have bridged Symbolism and the emerging modernist fragmentation of the interwar years. Today, his legacy lingers in niche circles, a reminder of how war reshapes—and often erases—artistic voices mid-flight.