Œuvres

Biographie

1862–1907

Louis RoyBorn in the Jura moun­tain range in East­ern France, Louis Roy met Paul Gau­guin in Pont-Aven in 1889, whilst being a young pro­fes­sor in draw­ing at the Lycée Michelet in Vannes, Brit­tany. Their mutu­al friend, Neo-Impres­sion­ism painter Émile Schuf­fe­neck­er had arranged the meet­ing and Gau­guin prompt­ly paint­ed Roy’s por­trait enti­tled ‘The Painter Roy’. Dur­ing the sum­mer of that year Roy showed at the leg­endary Volpi­ni exhi­bi­tion, organ­ised by Gau­guin at the Café des Arts to show off pub­licly the rev­o­lu­tion­ary new style called Syn­thetism dur­ing the Uni­ver­sal Exhi­bi­tion, which had its own offi­cial aca­d­e­m­ic art pavilion.
In 1891 Roy returned to Brit­tany to vis­it his friends whose influ­ence he now under­went. Roy gave up his Impres­sion­ist tech­nique in favour of paint­ing flat areas of colour, fill­ing in sim­pli­fied forms, akin to the process of ‘clois­soné’. This tech­nique as well as the dis­cov­ery of Japan­ese wood­block prints had led Gau­guin to devise this style which became known as Synthetism.
In 1894, Gau­guin com­mis­sioned Roy an orig­i­nal edi­tion of his wood­cuts which were to be the lim­it­ed sup­ple­ment of the edi­tion of his Noa Noa trav­el journal.
Roy also worked as an engraver for the Sym­bol­ist mag­a­zine L’Ymagier of Rémy de Goncourt and Alfred Jar­ry. Roy was a pro­fes­sor at the Lycée Buf­fon in 1894, and at the Lycée Voltaire as of 1895. Roy was also active as a respect­ed art crit­ic for the mag­a­zine Mer­cure de France, in which he was the first to pub­licly recog­nise the tal­ent of Le Douan­nier-Rousseau. Roy died in Paris in 1907.