Jacques Villon Biography
Jacques
Villon was born in 1875. His birth name was Gaston Duchamp, oldest
brother of the artists Marcel Duchamp, Suzanne Duchamp-Crotti and
the sculptor Raymond Duchamp-Villon.
Jacques
Villon began studying as a law student but in 1894 went to Paris
to study art. He changed his name to Jacques Villon (after the poet).
He met Toulouse-Lautrec
and many other influential artists working in Paris at the time.
He exhibited at the Salon d'Automne in 1904 and painted and made
prints of some of the finest belle-époque portraits and genre scenes
of the early 20th century. Around 1911 he came under the influence
of Picasso and other cubists and became a leading exponent of the
style, exhibiting in the New York Armoury Show in 1913. In 1922,
in straightened circumstances, he was commissioned by the Galerie
Bernheim-Jeune to produce a series of colour aquatints after 38
major 19th and 20th century paintings by artists including the Douanier
Rousseau, Pierre
Auguste Renoir, Henri Matisse, Pablo
Picasso, Cezanne,
Georges Braque, Dufy, Modigliani, Edouard
Manet, Pierre Bonnard and many others, and those artists who
were still alive collaborated and signed the prints which were meant
to provide the public with access to works which were not otherwise
available (colour photography was not an option to reproduce art
in those days). The project took 10 years to fulfill. Many of these
prints are highly prized today and some went on to be widely reproduced
by the Louvre Museum as photo-etchings. His 'cubist' style etchings,
with their characteristic cross-hatching (later to be emulated by
David Hockney and others) are amongst the most important prints
of the 20th century.
Jacques Villon's long career brought him fame and he was a major
figure in 20th century art. The diverse nature of his paintings,
from fin-de-siecle portraits to cubist and abstract styles and of
his graphic work - from belle epoque evocations of the 'beau monde'
to his distinctive hatchwork in his cubist etchings - is truly amazing.
He was made a Grand Officier de la Légion d'Honneur, its highest
honour and when he died at the age of 88 in 1963 and he was given
a state funeral.
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