Art of the 20th Century

 



Art Styles in 20th century Art Map



 





Paul Delvaux




 


 


Paul Delvaux

 

(b Antheit, nr Huy, 23 Sept 1897; d Veurne, 20 July 1994).

Belgian painter and printmaker. He was, with René Magritte, one of the major exponents of SURREALISM in Belgium. He began his training in 1920 at the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, initially as an architect, but he soon changed to decorative painting, and he completed his studies in 1924. In his earliest works, such as Seascape (1923; Ostend, Mus. S. Kst.) and The Couple (1929; Brussels, Mus. A. Mod.), he was strongly influenced by the Flemish Expressionism of painters such as Constant Permeke and Gustav De Smet. In the mid-1930s, however, he turned decisively to Surrealism, not as an orthodox member of the movement but to a large extent under the influence of Giorgio De Chirico’s Pittura Metafisica, which he had first seen c. 1926. Among his first characteristic works in this vein are Pink Bows (1937) and Phases of the Moon (1939; New York, MOMA), in both of which he incorporated the somnambulant figures that were to become his trademark.

 

 


The Phases of the Moon II


 

Untitled


 

The Dream


 

The Garden


 


Los ferroviarios de la Estacion de Luxemburgo


 


Boule


 

Robe de Marie


 




 

Lato


 

Unknown


 

La Genese


 

La Halte


 

Small Train Station at Night


 

Crucifixion


 

L'hiver


 

L'incendie


 


Los banistas


 


Le couple


 


La Venus dormida I


 


El aseo


 


El jardin de las cariatides


 


Leda


 


Las bellas errantes de Efeso


 


Las mujeres tumultuosas


 


El invierno. Esqueleto en un invernadero