Maximilien Luce  (French, 1858-1941) 

whitespace

Find Maximilien Luce artworks for sale worldwide, artworks that sold at auction, a detailed biography, and more information on the artist below.
envelope Get email alerts about this artist!  
Artworks for sale (20)
In Art Galleries (22)
Dealers selling (26)
Dealers Buying (1)

Sold Artworks
In Recent Auctions (3)
In Past Auctions (4123)

Calendar
Auctions (2)
Art Fairs (1)

artnet Magazine
Articles (4)

More Information
Biography
Monographs
artnet Analytics Reports
Market Reports
* paid service

Artworks for sale (20)

View All   

Maximilien Luce, Peniches et Remorquers sur la Seine

 

Maximilien Luce
Peniches et Remorquers sur la Seine
circa 1920

Anderson Galleries Inc., Beverly Hills
Maximilien Luce, Paysage pres de Mereville

 

Maximilien Luce
Paysage pres de Mereville
Linda Bernell Gallery
Maximilien Luce, A River Landscape

 

Maximilien Luce
A River Landscape
Mark Murray Fine Paintings
Maximilien Luce, Le berger observant Saint-Tropez et la mer, Saint-Tropez

 

Maximilien Luce
Le berger observant Saint-Tropez et la mer, Saint-Tropez
circa 1906

Galerie des Modernes
Maximilien Luce, La fenaison a l’illi de France

 

Maximilien Luce
La fenaison a l’illi de France
The Art Collection, Inc.
Maximilien Luce, Le depart des chalutiers

 

Maximilien Luce
Le depart des chalutiers
1930-1934

The Art Collection, Inc.
Maximilien Luce, Le port d'Amsterdam

 

Maximilien Luce
Le port d'Amsterdam
1908

Galerie Rienzo
Maximilien Luce, Le Petit Bras de la Seine au Pont Saint-Michel

 

Maximilien Luce
Le Petit Bras de la Seine au Pont Saint-Michel
1899

Stoppenbach & Delestre
Maximilien Luce, Paysan Quittant un Village (Peasant Leaving a Village)

 

Maximilien Luce
Paysan Quittant un Village (Peasant Leaving a Village)
1925

Arcature Fine Art
Past auction results (4123)  View All
Maximilien Luce, La Fabrique de briquettes sur la Sambre; Bords de la Sambre, Charleroi; Montigny près Charleroi (4 works)

 

Maximilien Luce
La Fabrique de briquettes sur la Sambre; Bords de la Sambre, Charleroi; Montigny près Charleroi (4 works), 1895
autography

 

View Details
Maximilien Luce, Deux portraits de Henri Edmond Cross

 

Maximilien Luce
Deux portraits de Henri Edmond Cross
pencil

 

View Details
Maximilien Luce, Scène de plage en Normandie

 

Maximilien Luce
Scène de plage en Normandie, 1930
oil on paper laid on canvas

 

View Details

  A painter, lithographer and draftsman, Maximilien Luce was born into a poor family in Paris on March 13, 1858. After an initial training as a wood carver at the Ecole des Arts décoratifs, he began to study engraving in 1872 and took evening courses to deepen his knowledge. In 1876 he entered the shop of the engraver Eugène Froment (1844-1900), with whom he traveled to London in 1877. After his return to Paris in 1879 Luce began his 4-year military service. During his service and later, up to 1885, he studied at the Académie Suisse and the studio of Carolus-Duran (1837-1917) at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. In his painting, he became influenced by Impressionism. In the 1880s he met and established friendly contacts with many Parisian painters, including Camille Pissarro (1830-1903), Georges Seurat (1859-1891) and Paul Signac (1863-1935). Together with them he was one of the founders of Neo-Impressionism (Pointillism).
  Through Camille Pissarro, Luce came under the influence of Anarchist ideas and formed friendships with the Anarchist writers and journalists Jules Christophe, Jean Grave, Georges Darien and Emile Pouget. In 1894 he became involved in the Trial of the Thirty and served a short term of imprisonment.
  Until 1904 Luce lived in Montmartre, the streets of which he liked to paint. During 1904-1924, he lived in Auteuil, then moved back to Paris. Besides street scenes, factories and wharfs, he painted numerous landscapes on his travels through the Etampes, Normandy and Brittany. During the First World War he also painted war scenes, wounded and homecoming soldiers. In 1934, Maximilien Luce was elected President of the Société des Artistes Indépendants after Signac’s retirement, but soon resigned in a protest against society's policy to restrict the admission of Jewish artists.
  Maximilien Luce died in Paris in 1941. He remains an important artist in Pointillism and social realism.
  Museums:
  France: Paris (Biblioteque Nationale Cabinet des Estampes, Musée National d’Art Moderne, Musée d’Orsay); Saint-Tropez (Musée de l’Annonciade); Charleroi (Musée des Beaux-Arts); Mantes-la-Jolie, (Musée Maximilien Luce)
  Finland: Amos (Anderson Art Museum)
  Switzerland: Geneva (Pétit Palais, Fondazione Oscar Ghez)
  UK: Glasgow (Museums and Art Galleries)
  Holand: Otterloo (Musée Rijksmuseum Kröller-Müller)
  Spain: Toledo (Museum of Art)
  USA: Saint-Louis (Art Museum); Springfield (Museum of Fine Arts, James Philip Gray Collection); Cleveland (Museum of Art); Indianapolis (Museum of Art, The Holliday Collection); New York (The Metropolitan Museum of Art); San Diego (Museum of Art)
   Enciclopedia Universale Seda della Pittura Moderna, Milano, Seda, 1969
   A. M. Comanducci, Dizionario illustrato dei Pittori, Disegnatori e Incisori Italiani Moderni e Contemporanei, Milano, Luigi Patuzzi Editore, 1972
   P. Cazeau, Maximilien Luce, Lausanne, Paris, La Bibliothéque des arts, 1982
   J.B. Luce, D. Bazetoux, Maximilien Luce, Catalogue raisonné de l’Oeuvre Peint, Parigi, Editions JBL, 1986
   B. Chavanne, B. Gaudichon, Catalogue Raisonné des peintures des XIX et XX siècle dans les collections du Musée de la Ville de Poitiers et de la Societé des Antiquaires de l’Ouest, 1988
   F. Lespinasse, La Normandie vue par les peintres, Losanna, Edita, 1988
   A.A.V.V., Pointillisme, sur les traces de Seurat, Losanna, Fondations de l’Hermitage, 1997
   N. Coret, Autour des Néo-Impressionnistes, Paris, Somogy Editions d’Art, 1999
   Noël Coret, Les peintres de la vallée de la Marne, Tournai, La Renaissance du Livre, 2000
   Da Renoir a Picasso, un secolo d’arte al Petit Palais di Ginevra, a cura di Paola Gribaudo, Milano, Electa, 2001
   Da Caillebotte a Picasso, I capolavori della collezione Oscar Ghez dal Museo del Petit Palais di Ginevra, a cura di L. Caramel, N. Sainte Fare Garnot, G. Gentry, Milano, Mazzotta, 2003