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Overview
From the 1860s, when Armand Guillaumin worked closely with Cezanne and Pissarro, to the 1890s, when he worked with young painters like Gustave Loiseau, his intense colorism and brilliant understanding of light clearly left their mark upon Impressionism.
At the age of 20, Armand Guillaumin had saved enough money to begin attending evening classes at the Academie Suisse, a prestigious art school in the centre of Paris. Known for being an institution of nonconformists (there were no examinations, grades, or rigid instruction) it proved to be a hotbed of future Impressionist artists. While studying at the academy, Guillaumin became particularly close to Camille Pissarro and Paul Cezanne, with whom he would remain friends for the rest of their lives.
For the next decade, he continued to paint with Cezanne and Pissarro, but was always hampered by his need to work. However, by 1874 he was a well enough known avant-garde painter that he was invited to participate as an original member of the First Impressionst Exhibition. While Guillaumin’s participation in this seismic exhibition has been overshadowed by, for example, Monet, his work from this period is striking. One of his paintings that now hangs in the Musée d’Orsay, painted a year before in 1873, was shown at the exhibition and testified to his prodigious talent and nuanced understanding of light. That he was able to create such an accomplished work despite his continued full-time work as a clerk, and without the same degree of training as his contemporaries, is nothing short of remarkable.
Armand Guillaumin occupies a distinctive yet often overlooked position within the history of Impressionism. While he is by no means an unknown artist, and his works are today in almost every major collection of French painting, his celebrity has not reached the heights of his direct contemporaries like Monet or Renoir. Yet it should not be forgotten that he was an Impressionist who was there ‘from the beginning’ and whose style was marked by vigorous colour, an unwavering commitment to painting en plein air, and an unusual independence of spirit.
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Works for sale
Jean-Baptiste Armand Guillaumin French, 1841-1927
Délices de l'Après-MidiOil on Canvas48.5 x 46 cms / 19 x 18 inchesSigned 'Guillaumin' (lower right)Weitere Abbildungen
Description
Délices de l'Après-Midi is a still life arranged on a pale, cloth-covered table. At the centre a shallow footed dish holds rows of pale finger biscuits, resembling sponge fingers, stacked in overlapping layers. Behind the dish a patterned cloth is folded back, red with a white motif and a blue underside. To the upper right stands a glazed ceramic jug with a domed, knobbed lid and a curved handle, worked in cool whites, greys and greens. Three or four apples in red and yellow-green are grouped at the lower right, set directly on the cloth. The background is built up in mottled ochre, olive, mauve and purple, suggesting a patterned hanging behind the table. Guillaumin applies the paint in thick, short strokes of strong, largely unmixed colour, setting the red and blue cloth against the warm background and the cool tablecloth. The canvas is signed lower right.
Still-life subjects appear across the career of Jean-Baptiste Armand Guillaumin (1841–1927) alongside the Creuse and Parisian landscapes for which he is best known. An original member of the Impressionist group, who met Cézanne and Pissarro at the Académie Suisse, Guillaumin intensified his palette from the 1880s in response to Post-Impressionism, and his still lifes of fruit and tableware show an awareness of Cézanne's example. The strong, high-keyed colour seen here is typical of his work throughout his life.
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