Maurice de Vlaminck Place de l'eglise
Artist: Maurice de Vlaminck
Title: Maurice de Vlaminck Place de l'eglise
Portfolio: Notre Pain Quotidien
Medium: Original lithograph
Date: 1963
Edition: 61/250
Sheet Size: 20" x 17
Price Upon Request
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Maurice de Vlaminck was born on April 4, 1876 in Paris to musician parents. He began painting as a teenager, and at seventeen studied painting with Henri Rigalon. At 23, while on a train to Paris, Vlaminck met Andre Derain. The two eventually opened a studio jointly, and painted together. For a time, Vlaminck lived in Chatou, and exhibited with his contemporary Fauvist painters, among them Henri Matisse and Derain. The influence of both Impressionism and early Expressionism in Europe -particularly the paintings of Vincent van Gogh- is evident in Vlaminck's paintings. Vlaminck's paintings are distinguished for their liberal application of pigment and breadth of color, for instance. Around 1908, Vlaminck came under the influence of Paul Cezanne, and the appearance of his paintings thus grew simpler and more monochromatic. Throughout his career, Vlaminck also produced numerous lithographs that retain the intense visual style of his paintings. Vlaminck died in Reuil-la-Gadelière on October 11, 1958.