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Fernand Léger (French, 1881-1955)
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Fernand Léger La Ville 1955
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Fernand Léger Paysage de Seine-et-Oise 1952
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Fernand Léger Personnage dans un intérieur 1920
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Biography |
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1881 |
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Born: Argentan, France |
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1903 |
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Ecole des Arts Décoratifs |
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1905 |
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Académie Julian |
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1909 |
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Ranked as one of the three major Cubists |
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1911 |
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Became a member of the Puteaux group |
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1955 |
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Died: Gif-sur-Yvette, France. (August 17th) |
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1955 |
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Awarded Grand Prix from the Biennale de Sao Paulo. Brazil. |
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1960 |
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The Musée Fernand Léger was inaugurated in Biot, France. |
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Fernand Léger was born in Argentan, France in 1881. He is associated with the Cubist movement and was an innovator in abstract art. Léger studied architecture and worked as an apprentice draughtsman in an architect's office. He later served in the Engineering Corps and became involved with stage and film design in Paris. By 1911 he had become friendly with Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso and had exhibited at the Salon des Independants. Léger was prolific in many media and gained recognition as one of the most prominent artists in Paris in the first half of the 20th century. Besides being a painter, filmmaker and designer, Léger also became successful printmaker, experimenting with lithography. Léger's steady intention was to provide art for the people. His ideas and philosophy attracted many students in both Europe and the Americas. He always had a great interest in industrial evolution and its relationship to man. This became one of the central themes of his oeuvre. Léger continually experimented with color, shape, movement, and space. Geometric forms and elements of a machine culture (cranks, pistons, robots, etc.) were important motifs in his many creations. In 1940, to escape German forces in Paris, Léger fled to the United States. The industrialism found in America heavily inspired his work of this period. While in the U.S., Léger taught at Yale University and at Mills College, California. Léger returned to France in 1945 and later in his life, he was awarded with many awards and exhibitions. Today his paintings and prints can be seen in prominent museums throughout the world. |
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Exhibitions |
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2008 |
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Oct. 2 - Oct. 25, "Fernand Leger, El cubista afable", Fundacion Unicaja, Malaga |
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2008 |
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Sept. 29, "La partie de campagne: Fernand Léger et ses amis photographes", Musee du Sud de la France |
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1998 |
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Feb. 15 - May 12, "Fernand Leger", The Museum of Modern Art, NY |
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1949 |
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XXV Viennale de Venise. Venice, Italy. |
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1949 |
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Retrospective. Musée National d'Art Moderne. Paris, France. |
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1937 |
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Exposition Universelle. Paris, France. |
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1935 |
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Art Insitute. Chicago, IL. |
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1935 |
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MoMA New York, NY. |
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1928 |
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Galerie Fleichteim. Berlin, Germany. |
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1925 |
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Exhibition of the Arts Décoratifs. Paris, France. |
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