An Intimacy Between André and Nature
Set against the most simplistic and romantic backgrounds, the artist transports us easily into surreal landscapes, which lighten the soul with dreamy infusions of figures set in the simplicity of colors, shape, and form. In an intimate communion with nature, he draws his inspiration from its language, sounds, and colors, thus revealing the natural beauty of our surroundings. Horses become the central points of his work because of their harmony with nature. The horse starts giving a sense of scale, by providing interesting dialogues with the proportions of the sea and sky. Brassier loves life, and for him the horses become important vivid catalizators of delight, with their forms and their ardour.
Brasilier distils nature by always trying to give the quintessence of a subject and to say a great deal with simplicity
Non-figurative Art Within Figuration
Although Brasilier bases his painting on reality, he is not a realistic painter, as once explained by Bernard de Montgolfier: One could say that Brasilier has a very personal way of being non-figurative within figuration. Indeed, he strives to make the invisible visible again, opening the viewers’ eyes upon the non-obvious, in a relentless quest for intimate and cohesive humanism. Brasilier likes to point out that he is always in a state of painting, whether he is really creating a work or just taking notes about the surroundings which inspire him. Painting becomes a serious purging of the soul and a profound self-expression in his lyrical and unique forms which can’t be placed easily within the dominant styles or voices which surrounded his long career.
The figures in his paintings are simplified so that the color becomes the carrier of emotion, movement, expression and dominance
Worldwide Sucess of Brasilier’s Works
In 1953 aged only 23, the artist won the Premier Grand Prix de Romeof painting. He had his first retrospective of 100 artworks from 1950-1980 at the Château de Chenonceau in 1980 and a Retrospective exhibition at the Musée Picasso-Château Grimaldi in Antibes (French Riviera) in 1988. Over the years he held numerous exhibitions all over the world: France, Germany, Japan, Switzerland, Canada, United States, Russia, The Netherland, Korea, Hong Kong… Notably, he was honored by a retrospective exhibition of his work at Russia’s renowned Hermitage Museum in Saint-Pétersbourg in 2005 and at the Museum Haus Ludwig für Kunstausstellungen in Germany in 2007. His works are becoming more and more popular on auctions with a very high price in the last years, most recently featured at American & European Fine Art Auction.
No comments:
Post a Comment