Charles Camoin 1879-1965

Charles Camoin 1879-1965

Charles Camoin 1879-1965 "Paysage" Oil on canvas / Signed lower right Dimensions : 73 x 92 cm Dimensions : 28.74 x 36.22 inch 32 avenue Marceau 75008 Paris | +33 (0)1 42 61 42 10 | +33 (0)6 07 88 75 84 | [email protected] | galeriearyjan.com Charles Camoin 1879-1965 Biography Charles Camoin was born in 1879 in Marseille. He studied at the School of Fine Arts in Marseille and received in 1895 a first prize. From 1898, Camoin studied at the Fine Art School in Paris in Gustave Moreau's studio. There, he met Henri Matisse, Albert Marquet and Henri Manguin. After the death of Moreau, Camoin decided to study in the Camillo Academy. In the same time, he was copying the great masters at the Louvre Museum, including Delacroix, Rubens and Fragonard. He made his first landscapes and sketches of Paris in the 1900s. In 1902, Camoin met Paul Cézanne in Aix-en-Provence with whom he befriended. After his military service, Camoin returned to Paris in 1903 and joined the group of artists around Henri Matisse: Henri Manguin, Albert Marquet and Jean Puy. They exhibited together at Berthe Weill's gallery. He participated with them in the "Cage aux Fauves" of the Salon d'Automne of 1905. Since then affiliated with Fauvism, he quickly became successful, exhibiting regularly in Paris and European salons. In 1908, Camoin had his first private exhibition, at the gallery of the young merchant Daniel Henri Kahnweiler. He joined Matisse in Tangier where he spent the winter season in 1912. On his return from Tangiers, Camoin destroyed a large part of the paintings in his studio. After the First World War, Camoin shared his life between his studio in Montmartre and that of Saint-Tropez where he settled in 1921, claiming more and more his taste for a sensual, voluptuous and spontaneous painting, inspired by Renoir, whom he visited in 1918. Camoin remained all his life attached to his favorite themes: landscapes of the South, portraits of women, still lifes and nudes. Although Camoin favored expression in color in his work, he was still attached to the transcription of the motif and the light variations. He was, therefore, "the most impressionistic of the Fauvists", as Bernard Dorival wrote. Two major retrospective exhibitions were organized after his death: in Nice in 1971 and more recently at the Cantini Museum in Marseille in 1998. Museums Musée des beaux-arts de la ville de Paris Musée national d'art moderne Centre Pompidou, Paris Musée Granet, Aix-en-Provence Musée de Grenoble Musée Cantini, Marseille Musée des beaux-arts, Nice Musée Fabre, Montpellier Petit Palais, Genève Institute of Art, Chicago MoMA, New-York Staatliche Museen, Berlin Bibliography 32 avenue Marceau 75008 Paris | +33 (0)1 42 61 42 10 | +33 (0)6 07 88 75 84 | [email protected] | galeriearyjan.com Charles Camoin 1879-1965 Charles Vildrac, Éloge de Charles Camoin, Paris, Manuel Brucker, 1956. Danièle Giraudy, Charles Camoin, sa vie, son oeuvre, Marseille, La Savoisienne, 1972. Collectif, Charles Camoin, rétrospective, 1879-1965, musées de Marseille, Réunion des Musées nationaux, 1997. Claudine Grammont , Correspondance Henri Matisse - Charles Camoin, Lausanne, La Bibliothèque des Arts, 1997. 32 avenue Marceau 75008 Paris | +33 (0)1 42 61 42 10 | +33 (0)6 07 88 75 84 | [email protected] | galeriearyjan.com.

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