20th Century European Art
20th Century Overview
part 2 of Soutine
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Between the World Wars Chaim Soutine (part 1 of 2) |
To get a larger version of a picture, click on the thumbnail
version.
born: Smilovich, a Lithuanian village near Minsk (now in Belarus); 1893
died: Paris, France; 9 August 1943
| 1893-1906 | Born tenth of eleven siblings into a Jewish family; his father was the town mender, one step lower than a tailor. Grew up in the small Lithuanian village of about 400 houses. Punished by his parents and brothers for wanting to draw. By thirteen years old he would sketch and draw on any scrap of paper he could find with charcoal. | |
| 1909 | 16 | Soutine approached a pious Jew and asked him to pose for a portrait. The man's son and their friends beat Soutine and left him for dead. His mother complained to the authorities and Soutine was granted 25 rubles as compensation. Using the money Soutine and his friend Michel Kikoïne went to Minsk to become artists. |
| 1910 | 17 | Studies for then months or so with an artist named Krueger and then leaves for Vilnus, capital of Lithuania. He enrolls in the School of Fine Arts. |
| 1913 | 20 | July, arrives in Paris. Moves in the artists quarters in "La Ruche" with another Lithuanian painter Pincus Krémègne. Also living in "La Ruche" were Chagall, Zadkine, Archipenko, and Dobrinsky. Continues his art studies in the Atelier Fernand Cormon in the School of Fine Arts. |
| 1915 | 22 | Chaim is introduced to Modigliani by Jacques Lipchitz, and Chaim and Modigliani become close friends. |
| 1916 | 23 | Léopold Zborowski becomes Soutine's art dealer at the urging of Modigliani. Soutine does odd jobs like baggage porter, worker in a Renault factory. He begins to have stomach problems and is dismissed from WWI work brigades for heath reasons. Moves into Cité Falguière, his neighbors were Lipchitz, Miestchaninoff, and Modigliani. He is still in extreme poverty. |
Note: The small letters and numbers which follow the title of a picture indicate
which specific picture is shown. These reference keys are to the Chaim
Soutine Catalogue Raisonné edited by Maurice Tuchman, Esti Dunow,
and
Klaus Perls; published in 1993 by Benedikt Taschen Verlag. The catalogue
is divided into three parts which are numbered separately. TL refers to
the landscapes, TSL the still life pictures, and TP the portraits. Dates
and locations below the pictures come from the same source. Almost all
Soutine's pictures are not dated by him on the picture. So most dates
are shown as "about", even if the date is pretty well established.
Location information is provided for those pictures that are publicly accessible.
Ones without any location notation are in private hands.
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Midi Landscape TL19 |
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Still Life with Pipe TSL07 |
Herrings TSL01 |
| 1917-1918 | 24 | Painting of Cité Falguiére and still life pictures of food. Short trip with Modigliani to Venice and southern France. |
| 1919 | 26 | At the urging of Leopold Zborowski Soutine goes to Céret in the French Pyrénées near the Spanish border. He lives and works in Céret painting primarily landscapes and some occasional portraits. World War I ends. |
In this period Soutine dabbled with self-portraiture. He did three and never returned to the form again:
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Little Pastry Cook TP27 |
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Jug with Lilies TSL22 |
Hanging Pheasant TSL20 |
| 1920 | 27 | Modigliani dies and his pregnant companion commits suicide the next day. While on a trip to Cagnes, Soutine hears of the deaths in Paris. |
| 1921 | 28 | Soutine begins to paint a series of portraits of praying men. |
| 1922 | 29 | Returns to Paris from Céret with more than 200 paintings. |
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Trees at Céret TL55 |
View of Céret TL86 |
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Ascending Road TL87 |
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Here we leave Chaim Soutine. He is penniless, and still living on the largess of his art dealer, he has brought back to Paris over 200 paintings which he painted in the Pyrénées, but now has begun to hate them. So out of his dissatisfaction, he is beginning to slash and destroy them. Depression has a clear hold on him. |
Continue with part 2, where Chaim's fortunes change for the better.
2003-11-12