Jean Neuberth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carton d'invitation exposition 2002
Carton d'invitation exposition 2002

Jean Neuberth was born November 1915 in Paris. He died on March 16, 1996 in Chantilly. He is a French abstract painter.

Contents

[edit] Biographie

The educational backgrounds of his mother - she was a French teacher at Lycée Lakanal and a first-rate harpsichordist - and of his father - first violin of "Colonne Concerts", a vila alta soloist - explains his early orientation for music and jazz in particular. An encounter with abstract painter, Henri-Jean Closon (Liège 1888 - Paris 1975) makes him discover painting. He sees him again in 1941 and then decides starting 1942 to devote all his time to painting. During the 70's, he abandons gouache and centers his works on sketching and pasting. In spite of several health problems - of which a hemiplegia - he will never abandon his artistic expression until his death in 1996.

He was qualified to be "one of the most active representative of abstract lyrics" by Pierre Carmes in 1993.

In 2002, from April 20 through May 20, a posthumous exhibit, which took place at at Place Neuve Gallery at Vers-Pont-du-Gard, draws a retrospective of some of his works entitled Jean Neuberth - gouaches and drawings 1959-1992.

[edit] His exhibits

  • November 1937, L'Equipe Gallery
  • 1946, "Salon des Surindépendants" (Independents Exhibit)
  • 1946, Autumn Exhibit
  • 1947, Lucienne Léonce Rosenberg Gallery, Gay-Lussac Street, Paris
  • 1948, "Salon des Réalités Nouvelles" (New Realities Exhibit)
  • October & November 1949, Paintings of Today", Beaux-Arts Museum of Nimes
  • 1951, 20-years of abstract painting, Montpelleir
  • May 1987, Exhibit at Caractères Gallery
  • 1993, Exhibit at the Sculptures Gallery, Visconti Street in Paris,

featuring a retrospective of his works, "Parcours du Secret" (Secret Route)

[edit] Works

[edit] Museums

  • Modern Art Museum of the City of Paris
    • list to come
  • Paris Town Hall
    • list to come

[edit] Works illustrations

In the 1970s, he illustrated works for the Bibliophile Circle[1] in Geneva, the Book Guild in Lausanne, or for the Sacred Music Encyclopedia (La Bergère, Paris), as well as for the international magazine of poetry, Caractères[2][3].

[edit] Notes & references

  1. ^ Alfred de Vigny; Study, Poetry."Les poèmes dorés, Idylles et Légendes, les Noces Corinthiennes : Anatole France. Distributed in Evreux by the Bibliophile Circle in 1970.
  2. ^ Caractère: International Poetry Magazine
  3. ^ Paul Mari "La vie c'est des platanes et des filles sur des chaises", illustrations by Jean Neuberth : Paris Caractères Editions : Caractères Collections N° 41.
  • Dictionary of Abstract Painting by Michel Seuphor, 1957 edition
"... he resumes his studies with Closon in 1941...Devotes all his time to painting since 1942...His abstract compositions rise in many manners. Sometimes, it's an uninterrupted arabesque on the surface of the canvas lke the nostalgia of old evolutions in the sky.."
" Having been acquainted with Closon, one of the first French abstract painters, he initiates him to painting. He participated, since 1937, to the rare abstract art exhibits organized in France. He devoted himself entirely to painting only after 1912. In 1949, with Francis Bott and Michel Seuphor, he organized an abstract art exhibit at the Nimes Museum. "

[edit] External links