Jean-Charles Cazin (1840-1901) was a French landscapist, museum curator and ceramicist.
The son of a well-known doctor, FJ Cazin (1788-1864), he was born at Samer, Pas-de-Calais.
After studying in France, he went to England, where he was strongly influenced by the pre-Raphaelite movement.
His chief earlier pictures have a religious interest, shown in such examples as The Flight into Egypt (1877), or Hagar and Ishmael (1880, Luxembourg); and afterwards his combination of luminous landscape with figure-subjects (Souvenir de fête, 1881; Journée faite, 1888) gave him a wide repute, and made him the leader of a new school of idealistic subject-painting in France.