"Naiditch Vladimir (mosacou 1903-1980 Paris) Russian, School Of Paris "
Naiditch Vladimir born in Moscow (Russian Empire) on August 26, 1903 and died in Paris on November 27, 19801, is a painter of the School of Paris. Coming from a wealthy family, Vladimir Naïditch studied drawing at the Moscow School of Applied Arts and exhibited for the first time at the age of fourteen. Son of Isaac Naïditch2,3, Zionist leader and co-founder of Keren Hayesod. Around 1920, he moved to Paris. In 1941 he went into exile in the United States of America, via Cuba, with his wife Génia and his one-year-old daughter, Irene, whom he introduced to painting. Then, the conflict ended, returned to Paris in 1947 with his family which now also has a son Michka. He manages a distillery (the Vexin liquor company, whose whiskey "le Biniou" will be served at a garden party under Mitterrand) but only lives through his painting. Exceptional colorist. Realizes many landscape canvases (his privileged places to paint were Notre-Dame-de-Bellecombe, Les Mesnuls, Belle-Île-en-Mer, Les Andelys) but also portraits or still lifes (especially in his workshop on Boulevard Saint Jacques in Paris).