Symphonie En Rose 1979
Andre Brasilier
Limited Edition Print : Lithograph on Arches Paper
Size : 28.35x21.26 in | 72x54 cm
Edition : From the edition of 175
Reduced
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🔥1979 Lithograph - Blue Chip $$$$$$$
Year1979
Hand SignedSigned By the Artist in Pencil
Condition Excellent
Not Framed
Purchased fromDealer 2020
Provenance / HistoryProvenance: American Gallery
Story / Additional InfoTitle: Symphonie en Rose. Medium: Original Lithograph, 1979, on Arches paper, signed by the artist in pencil. Note: This artist, much collected by the Japanese, is commonly connected with two major themes: horses and women with flowers. This work depicts a tranquil image of a young woman – looking out pensively across the water at sunset. Literature: Catalogue Raisonne: Le Pichon 129. See illustration on page 161. Edition: From the signed/numbered edition of 175 Condition: With fresh and bright colours. Small paper loss on lower margin not affecting the image. Provenance: American Gallery. Published by: Vision Nouvelle Editeur
Certificate of AuthenticityArt Brokerage
LID142180
Andre Brasilier - France
Art Brokerage: Andre Brasilier French Artist: b. 1929. André Brasilier, whose parents were also painters, was born in 1929 in Saumur, France. From an early age, he showed natural inclination for painting and he entered the Ecole des Beaux-Arts at the age of 20. In 1953, aged only 23, Brasilier won the Premier Grand Prix de Rome of painting. He had his first retrospective of 100 artworks from 1950-1980 at the Château de Chenonceau in 1980 and a Retrospective exhibition at the MuseÌe Picasso-Château Grimaldi in Antibes (French Riviera) in 1988. Over the years he held numerous exhibitions all over the world: France, Germany, Japan, Switzerland, Canada, United States, Russia, The Netherland, Korea, Hong Kong. Notably, he was honored by a retrospective exhibition of his work at Russia's renowned Hermitage Museum in Saint-Petersburg in 2005 and at the Museum Haus Ludwig für kunstausstellungen in Germany in 2007. Brasilier's works often feature themes and motifs of horses, nature, music and women. Set against the most simplistic and romantic backgrounds, he transports us easily into surreal landscapes, which lighten the soul with dreamy infusions of figures set in simplicity of colors, shape and form. In an intimate communion with nature, he draws his inspiration from its language, sounds and colors, thus revealing the natural beauty of our surroundings. Although Brasilier bases his painting on reality, he is not a realistic painter, as once explained by Bernard de Montgolfier: "One could say that Brasilier has a very personal way of being non-figurative within figuration". Indeed, he strives to make the invisible visible again, opening the viewers' eyes upon the non-obvious, in a relentless quest for intimate and cohesive humanism. Brasilier's exhibition in London includes his most notable themes, illustrating his love for nature, music, the human and life in general. Listings wanted, especially original paintings.