Claude Venard & Post Cubism

Claude Venard & Post Cubism

21 Woodstock Street London, W1C 2AP, United Kingdom Wednesday, February 23, 2022–Saturday, May 14, 2022

A selection of Claude Venard's finest paintings from his early "Forces  Nouvelles" period to the bold heavily-impastoed Post-Cubist works for  which he became internationally renowned during the 1950's.

Claude Venard (1913-1999) was a central figure of the post-war School  of Paris and became internationally renowned during the 1950's for his  bold heavily impastoed Post-Cubist paintings, built up through layer  upon layer of pigment incorporating different resins and varnishes to an  almost sculptural level. Described by the critic Waldemar George as  “Figurative Abstraction” in 1954, to experience Venard's work is a rich  visceral sensation.    

In his twenties Venard had fled from the orthodoxy of the Académie des  Beaux-Arts in Paris after only 48 hours. In 1938 he signed the  avant-garde “Rupture” manifesto, and participated in the "Forces  Nouvelles" group exhibitions. After the war (during which he enlisted  and fought before ending up in a prison camp and subsequently escaping),  he rejected the "miserablisme" of many of his fellow artists, and  developed his own vibrant expressive technique which received great  acclaim, and for which he is now famous.    

Before his death during the final hours of the twentieth century,  Claude Venard had become a highly celebrated artist having featured in  contemporary art exhibitions around the world since 1935. His work is  now represented in numerous museums of Modern Art worldwide.    

As well as the artist’s impastoed works in the exhibition such as the monumental almost Pop-Cubist painting “Composition au Vase de Fleurs” from the early 60’s; and his marine series with vigorous sgrafitto typified in “La Baie” 1959 and “Le Dechargement du Bateau”  1953; included are some rare early pre-impasto works which reveal the  artist’s distinct draughtsmanship that underlies his oeuvre, as in “Musique” c.1949 and “Jazz Parisien” c.1950.