Femme au Jardin
Femme au Jardin
JACQUES MAES
Belgian School
1905-1968
Femme au Jardin
Oil on canvas, signed and dated 1958
120.5 x 90 cms
471/2 x 35½ ins
Exhibited: Exposition d’Art, Province de Brabant
Jacques Maes was a painter of figures, portraits, landscapes and still-lifes, draughtsman, muralist, stained glass designer and engraver who was born in Ixelles in the Brabantine region in 1905.
He undertook his artistic training firstly at L'Académie Royale in Brussels from 1920 to 1924 under the tutelage of Herman Richir, Constant Montald, Gisbert Combaz and Jean Delville. He then attended L'Académie Saint-Josse-ten-Node where he was a pupil of Louis van Lint, Anne Bonnet and Gaston Bertrand who founded and were members of the artistic group, "La Route Libre".
Initially, Maes painted in a post-Expressionist style and his subject matter tended towards portraits, figures and still-life. He lived in Lima in Peru between 1946 and 1948 and his stay there influenced him considerably. The dazzling natural effects and the intense light there inspired him to use a warm and limpid palette and he structured the paintings so that the application of the colours was deliberately two dimensional, lacking perspective, so that each part of the picture seemed to grow out of the other. The result of this was that shortly after World War II, he almost could be described as an abstract artist but he never fully committed himself to this movement and eventually his style evolved into one which was intimately structured and imbued with a poetic realism.
In 1930 he came second in the Prix de Rome and in 1935 created some decorated panels for L'Exposition Universelle whch was held in Brussels and he also exhibited at the Venice Biennial, Palais des Beaux Arts and in San Paolo among others. He produced more or less in equal measure paintings, designs for tapestries and murals.
From 1936 he was teaching at L'Académie de Saint-Josse-ten-Node and was also its professor. Between 1950 and 1968 he was professor at L'Académie de Bruxelles and during his sojourn in Peru, he gave instruction in an atelier in the Academy in Lima.
He was a modernist who nonetheless remained a figurative painter who was particularly interested in intimate subjects but which still retained a certain monumentality. This actually makes him one of the fathers of Animism.
He died in an accident in Benicarlo, Spain in 1968.
Jacques Maes' work can be seen in Museums in Antwerp, Brussels, Ghent, Ixelles, Louvain, La Louvière, Mons and Tournai. Titles of some of his works include: "L'Écolière", "Nature Morte", "La Colisée à Rome", "Femme à Table", "La Plage au Soleil", "La Marachère" and "Vue de Village".
Bibliography:
Dictionnaire des Artistes Plasticiens de Belgique des XIXe et
XXe Siecles - Paul Piron
Dictionnaire des Peintres - E Benezit
Arto Dictionnaire Biographique Arts Plastiques en Belgique
Literature: Jacques Maes - Roger Bodaert
1905 - 1968
Oil on canvas
Belgium
Signed and dated 1958
Jacques Maes - Roger Bodaert
Dictionnaire des Artistes Plasticiens de Belgique des XIXe et
XXe Siecles - Paul Piron
Dictionnaire des Peintres - E Benezit
Arto Dictionnaire Biographique Arts Plastiques en Belgique
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