Rouen School

Salon des Artistes Rouennais, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rouen, c.1930

The Rouen School (L'École de Rouen) is a term used for artists or artisans born or working in Rouen, or for all artistic products from Rouen, such as Rouen faience of the 16th to 18th centuries.

The term was first used in 1902 by Arsène Alexandre in his catalogue to an exhibition by Joseph Delattre in the galerie Durand-Ruel in Paris. Alexandre used it to refer to Joseph Delattre, Léon-Jules Lemaître, Charles Angrand and Charles Frechon, four Post-Impressionist artists interested in Neo-Impressionism (and particularly Seurat's pointillism) towards the end of the 1880s.[1] Alexandre also used the term for a second generation of l'École de Rouen, including Robert Antoine Pinchon and Pierre Dumont among others, in relation to Fauvism and Cubism.[1]

Works

Representatives

  • Charles Angrand
  • Édouard de Bergevin
  • Léonard Bordes
  • Georges Bradberry
  • Marcel Couchaux
  • Georges Cyr
  • Joseph Delattre
  • Gaston Duhamel
  • Pierre Dumont
  • Alfred Dunet
  • Charles Frechon
  • Michel Frechon
  • Isabelle de Ganay
  • Narcisse Guilbert
  • Narcisse Hénocque
  • Madelaine Hippolyte
  • Pierre Hodé
  • Magdeleine Hue
  • Albert Lebourg
  • Raimond Lecourt
  • Léon-Jules Lemaître
  • Suzanne Léon
  • Maurice Louvrier
  • Pierre Le Trividic
  • Gaston Loir
  • Maurice Louvrier
  • Hyppolite Madelaine
  • Albert Malet
  • Paul Mascart
  • Robert Antoine Pinchon
  • Raymond Quibel
  • René Sautin
  • Adrien Segers
  • Jean Thieulin
  • Eugène Tirvert
  • Maurice Vaumousse
  • Henri Vignet
  • Jean Charles Contel

Bibliography

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 After James H. Rubin, L'Impressionnisme, 2008 [1999], ISBN 978-0-7148-9081-4.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.