Œuvres
Biographie
1841–1927
Born in Paris, Armand Guillaumin spent a large part of his childhood in modest conditions in the town of Moulins, located in the centre of France. Aged sixteen, Guillaumin was sent to Paris to help out at his uncle’s commercial enterprise. He took some drawing courses before starting a job at the Orléans Railway Company and attending the ‘Académie Suisse’ and its life-model classes, which had attracted many Impressionist students. Here he encountered Camille Pissarro and Paul Cézanne whom he befriended. In 1873, Cézanne made a portrait of him entitled ‘Guillaumin au Pendu’ (1873).
As an adherent of Impressionism, Guillaumin exhibited at the ‘Salon des Refusés’ in 1863; he also took part in the first edition of ‘l’Exposition des Impressionnistes’ held in 1874 and regularly contributed to this much debated yearly event until 1886.
Guillaumin joined his close friend Pissarro in Pontoise during the early 1870s and opted for a vivid colour palette to render the beauty of the banks of the Seine in the Oise area, in Ivry-sur-Seine, Clamart and Charenton.
During the 1890s Guillaumin’s intense palette announced his development towards Fauvism, which characterised his work of the 20th Century and would influence the young Othon Friesz. From 1893 onwards, Guillaumin spent much time painting the rural landscape surrounding the picturesque town of Crozant located in the Creuse area of Central France. As such, he became a leading participant of the so-called ‘École de Crozant’.
Guillaumin also travelled through Provence to visit his friend Paul Cézanne, and to Agay on the Mediterranean, where Albert Marquet lived and where Louis Valtat and Henri Lebasque often painted.
In short, two major styles characterise the abundant production of Guillaumin; an Impressionism inspired period was followed by a proto-Fauve period. Guillaumin passed away in Paris in 1927.