Of course. Here is the biographical information accurately rewritten into a cohesive paragraph:
Jean-Pierre Haag was born on November 5, 1842, in Elbeuf, Normandy, to Jean-Pierre Haag, a mechanic, and his wife, Genevieve Maloizel. In 1870, he joined the Ecouen Painters Colony, where he studied under Pierre Edouard Frere and Leon Dansaert. That same year, he made his debut at the Paris Salons with his painting “Interieur de forge a Villiers-le-Bel.” Like his fellow artists in Ecouen, where he remained a member until his death in 1921, Haag specialized in genre scenes depicting country life. He married Ernestine Juliette Confais, and their son, Jean Gaston Haag, also became a painter. Among his notable works are “La gardeuse d’enfants en Normandie,” which was exhibited at the Paris Grand Palais in 1980, and “Le jeu de dominos,” shown in London in 1989; both paintings are held in the collection of the Louviers Museum in Normandy.
