Paul Delvaux
1897 - 1994
Les Captives
35 x 43.5 cm (13 ³/₄ x 17 ¹/₈ inches)
Signed and dated lower right, P. Delvaux 1955
Inscribed on the reverse
Private collection, London, acquired from the above
This original artwork by Paul Delvaux is available for immediate purchase.
Paul Delvaux
biography
Thanks to private art tuition undertaken alongside his architectural studies, in 1925 Delvaux gained his first solo exhibition in Brussels. Heavily influenced by contemporary Expressionism and Surrealism, Delvaux was soon drawn to the ‘metaphysical’ paintings of Italian artist Giorgio de Chirico. On a chance visit to a museum of medical curiosities, Delvaux was moved by the sight of uncanny skeletons and haunting automatons – images and memories of which would provide his work with lifelong and evocative motifs.
Although most famous for his enigmatic female nudes set in dream-like landscapes, Delvaux - often compared to fellow Belgian surrealist René Magritte – did not in fact consider himself one of the surrealists, who were primarily concerned with the ‘interior logic’ of the unconscious mind. In developing his own unique iconography, Delvaux, instead, emphasised hallucinatory childhood readings of Classical Greek literature and the fictional fantasies of novelist Jules Verne.
In 1958 Delvaux was elected a member of the Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique and, in 1965, became a director of his alma mater, the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels. To compliment his widely featured work in international museums across the world, the Paul Delvaux Museum opened on the south west coast of Belgium in 1982.
Paul Delvaux
biography
you may also like
1882 - 1960
Petite maison au bord de l'eau
33 x 41 cm (13 x 16 ¹/₈ inches)
1863 - 1944
A Spring Morning, Blackpool Vale
53.6 x 65.5 cm (21 ¹/₈ x 25 ³/₄ inches)
1885 - 1937
Composition abstraite
23.3 x 20.2 cm (9 ¹/₈ x 8 inches)