Georges Rouault Circus of the Flying Stars: The Ballerinas 1938
Georges Rouault Circus of the Flying Stars: The Ballerinas 1938

Georges Rouault Circus of the Flying Stars: The Ballerinas

Artist: Georges Rouault

Title: Georges Rouault Circus of the Flying Stars: The Ballerinas

Medium: Original lithograph

Date: 1938

Frame Size: 22" x 17"

Sheet Size: 16" x 13

Signature: Signed in the stone


Price Upon Request

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Georges Henri Rouault was born in 1873 to a poor Parisian family. Encouraged by his mother, at fourteen he apprenticed as a glass painter, and at eighteen enrolled at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. Throughout the 1890s, Rouault met Henri Matisse, Albert Marquet, and other artists who would introduce him to the Fauvist art movement. He also met Jacques Maritain, a writer and philosopher whose Spiritualist ideas influenced Rouault's subject matter. Many of Rouault's subject s were religious after this meeting. Rouault's visual style was unique, and his paintings indicate the influence of the Fauvists and of early European expressionists such as Vincent van Gogh. His training as a glass painter may have also influenced his style, as Rouault depicted his subjects with heavy contours and black lines. These lines give the viewer the impression of colored glass held together with cames (thin pieces of lead fused together to form stained glass windows). Rouault's first solo exhibit took place at the Galerie Druet in 1910, and by the 1930s he was exhibiting in London and New York. Toward the end his life, Rouault destroyed approximately 300 of his paintings, believing that he would not live long enough to finish them. He died in Paris in 1958.

Georges Rouault, Georges Rouault Circus of the Flying Stars: The Ballerinas, 1938, Unsigned, Original lithograph, 22" x 17" Framed Size, 16" x 13 Sheet Size,

Gallery Reference:

GREW1

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