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Henri Jean Guillaume Martin, Sous le grand marronnier de Marquayrol
TITLE:  Sous le grand marronnier de Marquayrol
ARTIST:  Henri Jean Guillaume Martin
WORK DATE:  1915
CATEGORY:  Paintings
MATERIALS:  Oil on canvas
MARKINGS:  Signed and dated 1915
SIZE:  h: 68 x w: 92 cm / h: 26.8 x w: 36.2 in
REGION:  French
PRICE*:  Contact Gallery for Price
GALLERY:  Richard Green  44 (0) 207 493 3939  Send Email
DESCRIPTION:  In a period, carved and gilded Louis XIV frame
Frame size: 36 ½ x 45 ½ in / 93 x 115.5 cm

Martin found he no longer enjoyed living in Paris and in 1900 purchased the property of Marquayrol in the village of Labastide du Vert in the Lot valley in south west France as a summer retreat. From this time on Martin painted almost exclusively in the countryside around his house, which was set on a hillside overlooking the village and surrounding valley. Here he revelled in the beauty and serenity of nature that he lacked in Paris and these intensely peaceful surroundings were to become Martin’s preferred subject matter, he depicted very single detail of the house and gardens – the round pool and its statue, the terrace with its vine covered arbors, the pergola, the vineyard, the gate and even his pots of geraniums became recurring themes in his work.

HENRI MARTIN
Toulouse 1860 - 1943 Labastide du Vert

Henri Martin moved to Paris in 1879 from his home town of Toulouse. A scholarship enabled him to study in the studio of Jean Paul Laurens and in 1883, at the age of 23, he was awarded his first medal at the Paris Salon.

In 1885, Martin won a trip to Italy, a journey that was to have a profound effect upon his artistic development. Until this period he had adopted a classical, cold and correct technique, but the Italian light and his study of masters such as Giotto and Masaccio gave him a new perspective.

Influenced by the Neo-Impressionists, Martin used the Divisionist technique to give his work an ethereal quality; he abandoned the academic style of his earlier works and in 1889 submitted a canvas to the Salon that was wholly Pointillist. During the next decade, still impressed by the work of the Symbolists, Martin peopled his landscape with shimmering creatures and floating muses. Puvis de Chavannes said of him: 'Celui-ça sera mon heritier, il me continuera'. However, from 1900 Martin appears to have detached himself from the Symbolists and allowed his admiration for the Impressionist to influence his work to a greater extent.

A shy, quiet character, Henri Martin remained independent, refusing contracts from many successful Parisian dealers. He found he no longer enjoyed living in Paris, and, from the turn of the century painted almost exclusively in the countryside abound his house, Marquayrol near Labastide du Vert in the Lot Valley. His painting changed very little from this time on - he had found a style with which he was comfortable; these canvases, often large, colourful and filled with light, are widely considered to be amongst his most successful works.

PROVENANCE:  Galerie Georges Petit, Paris
Marcel Pignier, Paris
Private collection, France, acquired circa 1960
ONLINE CATALOGUE(S):  Inventory Catalogue
 
*Prices subject to change

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