THIS OBJECT WAS SOLD
La Boulaye, Horse Rider, Oil On Paper, Circa 2000
Antoine de La Boulaye (born in 1951)
Horse rider
Oil on paper
Signed lower left
35 x 46 cm
After studying at the Ecole Superieure d’Arts Graphiques of the Academie Julian in Paris, La Boulaye started exhibiting at prestigious venues, from the Chantilly Grand Stables, to the Museums of Nantes and Beziers, the French Institute in Seville, and many leading French galleries, including exhibitions at the FIAC (Foire Internationale d’Art Contemporain) in Paris.
His official recognition came in 1984, when he was commissioned by the president of France to paint two paintings offered as a gift to Her Majesty the Queen during the President’s visit to the United Kingdom.
His search has recently led him to create vivid and colourful images of “staged” scenes, representing elements of imaginary riders as well as static landscapes which come through the painting with a vivid sense of movement. This result is achieved by following a painstaking process of first painting his subject in a highly finished way before deconstructing it, rubbing and obliterating it and superimposing it with other images.
Public Collections:Banque Societe Generale
H.M.K Charles III
Fonds Regional d’Art Contemporain of the Loire region
Fonds National d’Art Contemporain
French Embassy in Mexico
French Embassy in Madrid
Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris
Arthoteque - La Roche sur Yon Museum
City of Niort
Horse rider
Oil on paper
Signed lower left
35 x 46 cm
After studying at the Ecole Superieure d’Arts Graphiques of the Academie Julian in Paris, La Boulaye started exhibiting at prestigious venues, from the Chantilly Grand Stables, to the Museums of Nantes and Beziers, the French Institute in Seville, and many leading French galleries, including exhibitions at the FIAC (Foire Internationale d’Art Contemporain) in Paris.
His official recognition came in 1984, when he was commissioned by the president of France to paint two paintings offered as a gift to Her Majesty the Queen during the President’s visit to the United Kingdom.
His search has recently led him to create vivid and colourful images of “staged” scenes, representing elements of imaginary riders as well as static landscapes which come through the painting with a vivid sense of movement. This result is achieved by following a painstaking process of first painting his subject in a highly finished way before deconstructing it, rubbing and obliterating it and superimposing it with other images.
Public Collections:
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