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Chaïm Soutine (1894-1944) was the 10th child
of a Jewish family living in a Lithuanian ghetto.
Brought up in the strict observance of the
Jewish orthodox religion, Soutine somewhat rebelled against his father,
who was a tailor, and managed to attend the Academy of Fine Arts of Vilno
at 14 before settling in Paris in 1911. There he was admitted at the Ecole
des Beaux-Arts and worked under Fernand
Cormon.
Living in one of the famous studios
of la Ruche near Montparnasse. He then befriended Chagall and Modigliani
and after a short trial period he came to find his own style mixing his
Jewish feelings with the teachings of Fauvism and Cubism.
In fact, Soutine could never detach
himself from the memories of the hardship suffered during his younger
days. A kind of feverish passion drove him to produce distorted and violently
coloured paintings and on reaching fame he said that if he had failed
in his attempt to become a great artist he would probably have given up
painting to become a boxer. Ill-tempered and unsociable, Soutine was kind
only with women. Often facing depression he was once saved from suicide
by his friend Krémègne.
After a period during which he was
deeply affected by the death of Modigliani in 1920 he however worked intensely
and managed to sell one hundred of his works to Dr Barnes, a well-known
American collector. Investing himself in painting with a rage reminiscent
of that shown previously by Van Gogh,
he went on to produce landscapes, still lifes and portraits which were
true masterpieces. Constantly obsessed by forms and colours, often dejected
and unsatisfied, Soutine destroyed many paintings during fits of despair.
He seldom showed his works, apart during the important exhibition of Independent
Art held in 1937 in Paris where he was at last hailed as a great painter. His
glory was however short-lived since a few months after the invasion of
France by German troops he had to flee the French capital and live like
a fugitive in order to escape arrest by the hands of the Gestapo or the
Vichy police. Humiliated and persecuted, he had to move from one place
to another and was sometimes forced to seek shelter in forests, sleeping
in open-air at night. Suffering from a stomach ulcer and bleeding badly
he had to leave a safe hiding place in order to undergo urgent surgery.
After a perilous travel during which
he was hidden in a hearse he died a few hours after a surgical operation
in a Paris hospital on August 8th 1944 two weeks before the French capital
was freed by Allied troops. Known as a major Expressionist painter, Soutine,
so miserable during his lifetime, became a legend after his death. His
works are worth between US $ 180,000 and 2,500,000.
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