Interior with nude by Armand Bouten
Interior with nude by Armand Bouten
Interior with nude by Armand Bouten
Interior with nude by Armand Bouten
Interior with nude by Armand Bouten
Interior with nude by Armand Bouten
Interior with nude by Armand Bouten
Interior with nude by Armand Bouten
Interior with nude by Armand Bouten
Interior with nude by Armand Bouten

Interior with nude 1920 - 1930

Armand Bouten

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Dille Art

  • Über Kunstwerk
    Beautiful work on paper by the Dutch painter Armand Bouten. In a nearly, moving and loving way, he portrayed his wife, the artist Han Korevaar, standing naked in her interior. The way he used his colours is so beautiful and atmospheric. Special detail are also the cats, on top of the table. Cats are often found in his paintings.

    Watercolour and pencil on paper, in the bottom right signed in blue with "Bouten".

    The work is newly framed with museum glass and framed with an acid-free cardboard back.

    Biography:
    Armand Bouten (Venlo 1893 - Amsterdam 1965), grew up in Venlo and left in 1912 to Amsterdam where he followed the study for art teacher at the 'Rijksnormaalschool'. Here he met the love of his life, Han Korevaar, who was a fellow student. They stay together all their lives.

    His outspoken expressive paintings give him many negative critiques. In 1922, they married and decided to go on a honeymoon to Italy, eventually ending up in Budapest where they would stay for a year.

    His paintings contain recurring themes and especially the desolation of a large city is a recurring theme, often he paints brothels, music-making Gypsies, cafes and cats.

    They make multiple trips and stay in many different countries where they stayed for shorter or longer periods of time. They made multiple trips to mainly Eastern Europe and Berlin. In 1924 they went to Paris, they lived and worked in Montparnasse, a district with many artists and studio homes. They made easy contacts, made contact with the German art dealer Herwarth Walden, founder of the art magazine 'Der Sturm'.

    In Paris, Bouten especially painted many elegant ladies in a festive environment. His work has clear influences of Chagall, which he also becomes to knew in Paris.

    His work is more optimistic in terms of colour, his ladies looked happy and challenging. Especially his watercolours from the second half of the 1920's in terms of use of colour and brushwork are different. More pastel tones, lighter and looser. Eventually his work getting sadder, women are thin and also his use of colour is getting darker.

    Presumably they get to live in Brussels in the 30's, they stay there until 1953. In the 1930s he also begins to make images that clearly had African influences. Right after the liberation in 1945, he has a major exhibition at Galerie Apollo, a reputable Gallery where Ensor, Permeke, Brusselmans and Gustave de Smet also exhibited. He is known as one of the artists of the École de Paris. It will be his last exhibition. He eventually returns back to the Netherlands in 1953 and lived the last years of his life in extreme poverty.

    Literature:
    In 2008, the Groninger Museum held a large retrospective on the work of Armand Bouten, and a book was published with the title; 'Armand Bouten (1893-1965), Kunst maakt zichzelf', een diepgeworteld expressionisme'. Susan van den Berg. Edition Groninger Museum, 2008.



    Measurements:
    Artwork:
    Length: 32 cm (12,6")
    Width: 24 cm (9,45")
    Framed:
    Length: 52 cm (20,47")
    Width: 43,5 cm (17,13")
  • Über Künstler

    Armand Bouten lived in the Pijp area of Amsterdam. He established himself as a skillful drawer and painter. In 1920, Bouten made a tour of eastern Europe, where he produced watercolours and gouaches of gypsies and peasant fairs. These works on paper were easy to take along on his travels around Europe.

    Bouten's period of expressionism in the years 1917 to 1919 - monumental shapes and sparkling / glowing colors - changed to a scope for futuristic elements and a more lively pallet after his travels. The themes and subjects that he depicted also changed after his return to Amsterdam, when he began to concentrate on nightlife scenes. His work has many similarities to that of the German artist Georg Grosz (1893-1959), though Bouten's approach is different in that he never intended to pass judgement on his subjects.

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