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Overview
"I feel the secret of Jacob’s success was simply finding a subject matter and depicting it in delicate tones and hues, which have continued to exert universal appeal ever since" - Anthony Fuller, Chairman.
Alexandre Louis Jacob is best known for his atmospheric and luminous landscapes. He gained his rare understanding and love for nature through studied inspection, transferring his observations skillfully on to canvas. His masterful evocation of light, atmosphere, colour and sense of place are remarkable and have a true ability to transport the viewer to the very banks of the River Seine and River Marne where Jacob would patiently wait, paintbrush poised to capture his unique visions of the French countryside.
Herbert Fuller, of Gladwell & Company, London, first came across Jacob’s work in the Paris Salon after the Second World War, and it was at this point that Jacob’s work began to attract the international clientele of this historic art gallery in the City of London. Initially Jacob was represented by Galerie Haussmann in Paris, but as his popularity grew, Gladwell & Company acquired work directly from the artist from the early 1960’s until Jacob’s death in 1972.
Jacob’s work has featured in numerous exhibitions in France, South America, United States and throughout Europe. His paintings have been acquired by the French Government, the City of Paris, The Department Seine and the Conseil General de la Seine. Jacob’s work also features in many distinguished private collections and museums across Europe, including Troyes, St. Etienne, Fougeres, Paris, St. Nazair and St. Quentin.
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Works
Alexandre Louis Jacob French, 1876-1972
Eclarcie Après la PluieOil on Board30.5 x 33 cms / 12 x 13 inchesSigned 'A Jacob' (lower left)Description
Éclaircie Après la Pluie depicts a marshland landscape viewed across calm water beneath a sky beginning to clear after rain. At the right a small farmhouse sits on a slightly raised bank, accompanied by tall, bare poplars whose trunks rise sharply against the luminous cloud. A narrow boat moves across the water in the middle distance, its dark form reflected on the smooth surface of the channel. Low vegetation and reeds line the banks, while the horizon remains flat and open, characteristic of the wetlands of northern France. Alexandre Louis Jacob often painted the canals and marshes of the Somme and neighbouring regions during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. These low-lying landscapes, marked by waterways, scattered farmsteads and lines of poplar trees, form a recurring subject throughout his work.
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