Louise Hervieu PRICE CHARTS
1878 Alencon, France - 1954 Versaille, France. Known for: Painting, charcoal drawings and pastel still life and interior scenes, novel writing.
An extraordinary figure in the artistic and literary circles of Paris in the first half of this century, Louise-Jeanne-Aimée Hervieu took up painting around 1905. She participated in the Salon des... Read full biography
An extraordinary figure in the artistic and literary circles of Paris in the first half of this century, Louise-Jeanne-Aimée Hervieu took up painting around 1905. She participated in the Salon des Indépendants in Paris, and in 1910 had a one-woman exhibition at the Galerie Eugène Blot in Paris.... Read full biography
An extraordinary figure in the artistic and literary circles of Paris in the first half of this century, Louise-Jeanne-Aimée Hervieu took up painting around 1905. She participated in the Salon des Indépendants in Paris, and in 1910 had a one-woman exhibition at the Galerie Eugène Blot in Paris. After this, however, she abandoned painting at the insistence of her parents, although she continued to make charcoal drawings and pastels, often of still lives and interior scenes. She soon came to the... Read full biography
An extraordinary figure in the artistic and literary circles of Paris in the first half of this century, Louise-Jeanne-Aimée Hervieu took up painting around 1905. She participated in the Salon des Indépendants in Paris, and in 1910 had a one-woman exhibition at the Galerie Eugène Blot in Paris. After this, however, she abandoned painting at the insistence of her parents, although she continued to make charcoal drawings and pastels, often of still lives and interior scenes. She soon came to the attention of the critic Félix Fénéon, who in 1917 organized the first of several exhibitions of her drawings at the Galerie Bernheim-Jeune. Fond of intense chiaroscuro techniques, Hervieu achieved remarkable effects of mood and mystery in her... Read full biography
An extraordinary figure in the artistic and literary circles of Paris in the first half of this century, Louise-Jeanne-Aimée Hervieu took up painting around 1905. She participated in the Salon des Indépendants in Paris, and in 1910 had a one-woman exhibition at the Galerie Eugène Blot in Paris. After this, however, she abandoned painting at the insistence of her parents, although she continued to make charcoal drawings and pastels, often of still lives and interior scenes. She soon came to the attention of the critic Félix Fénéon, who in 1917 organized the first of several exhibitions of her drawings at the Galerie Bernheim-Jeune. Fond of intense chiaroscuro techniques, Hervieu achieved remarkable effects of mood and mystery in her drawings. She was friendly with such artists as Félix Vallotton, Pierre Bonnard and Edouard Vuillard, and also provided illustrations for several book... Read full biography
Louise Hervieu - Charts
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