André Maire (1898 - 1984) — Angkor, The Guardians Of The Temple, 1955 flag

André Maire (1898 - 1984) — Angkor, The Guardians Of The Temple, 1955
André Maire (1898 - 1984) — Angkor, The Guardians Of The Temple, 1955-photo-2
André Maire (1898 - 1984) — Angkor, The Guardians Of The Temple, 1955-photo-3

1633253-main-68ef92dbe44ca.jpg 1633253-68ef92f132998.jpg 1633253-68ef93047a48f.jpg

Object description :

"André Maire (1898 - 1984) — Angkor, The Guardians Of The Temple, 1955"
Angkor, The Guardians of the Temple, 1955
Conté chalk on paper, signed and dated 1955 at the bottom center.
65 x 50 cm

Provenance:
Family of the artist

Bibliography:
Angkor, le Cambodge d'André Maire, Somogy, Paris, 2005, reproduced on p. 26.

André Maire (1898-1984) – Painter-traveler, humanist witness of Asia and the world

André Maire was born in Paris in 1898. Sensitive to his early artistic gifts, his father enrolled him in 1909 at the Municipal Drawing School on Place des Vosges, where he would be a student until the latter's death in 1916. The following year, his mother died. To support himself, the young man worked in a theater set factory. He frequented the Devambez studio and the painter Emile Bernard, who became his mentor and introduced him to different artistic techniques, advising him on his reading and his artistic and personal choices. Mobilized at the end of 1917, André Maire completed his military service in Indochina, where he taught drawing. He discovered the site of Angkor, which would profoundly influence his imagination and his work. In 1921, returning from Asia, he left for Italy with Emile Bernard and married his daughter Irène in Venice in 1922. The couple settled there for seven years, running a small gallery where André Maire offered his works for sale. They nevertheless maintained ties with Paris, renting a small studio. The artist developed the sepia technique, conducive to large decorative compositions and a strong taste for architecture. In 1930, André Maire won the Casa Velázquez Prize and spent two years in Spain, discovering Toledo, Ronda, Salamanca, Gibraltar, etc. The same year, he acquired a house in Burgundy, in Semur-en-Auxois, which became his home base. At the end of the 1930s, he discovered Egypt and then India; but while he was in Ceylon, war broke out, forcing him to return to France where he was mobilized. After the war, he undertook a trip to Africa along the Niger River, interrupted by malaria. The year 1947 marked his return to Asia where he settled for ten years (only returning to France in 1951 and 1954). He stayed in Hanoi, Saigon, and Dalat, where he became attached to the highlands and the lively life on the banks of the Mekong. He also traveled to Madagascar in the late 1950s. André Maire's travels were long and allowed him to explore not only the landscapes but also the local populations and cultures, forging a humanist vision that permeates all his work. From the 1930s, he exhibited in prestigious Parisian galleries: Charpentier, Georges Petit, but also in Brussels at Isy Brachot. He spent the last years of his life in Semur-en-Auxois, continuing his painting, nourished by the memories and reveries of his many travels. In 2015, the Alexis Pentcheff gallery, in collaboration with Mrs. Lorédana Harscoët-Maire (his daughter), organized a major retrospective of André Maire's work, presenting more than a hundred works.

Discover more of this artist's works on the gallery's website: https://www.galeriepentcheff.fr/fr/peintre-andre-maire
Price: 3 000 €
Artist: André Maire
Period: 20th century
Style: Asian art
Condition: Good condition

Material: Paper

Reference: 1633253
Availability: In stock
line

"Galerie Alexis Pentcheff" See more objects from this dealer

line

"Drawings, Asian art"

More objects on Proantic.com
Subscribe to newsletter
line
facebook
pinterest
instagram

Galerie Alexis Pentcheff
19th & 20th centuries paintings
André Maire (1898 - 1984) — Angkor, The Guardians Of The Temple, 1955
1633253-main-68ef92dbe44ca.jpg

0682729579



*We will send you a confirmation email from info@proantic.com Please check your messages, including the spam folder.

Thank you! Your submission has been received!

Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form