GEORGES ARTEMOFF
"LES ACROBATES"
OIL ON CANVAS, SIGNED, C.1925
RUSSIAN, WORKED IN PARIS
29 X 18.5 INCHES
George
Artemoff George Artemoff
was born in the Don Valley area of Russia in 1892. He studied in Rostov
and Moscow before he came to the Montparnasse district of Paris in 1913.
There he became acquainted with Ossip Zadkine, Juan Gris, Jules Pascin,
Modigliani and Picasso. In 1914
he joined the French Foreign Legion, only to be wounded at Champagne.
He returned to Russia where he remained through the Revolution until
1923. In 1923 he took a studio in Paris. His work was influenced by
his Russian heritage; he often painted scenes featuring Cossacks or
various themes from Russian folklore. In 1927
he exhibited at the Salon des Artistes Décorateurs where he won
the silver medal, he won the gold in 1928. He exhibited continuously
throughout the 1930s in Paris and all across France. In 1937 his work
was featured in one of the pavilions at l’Exposition Universalle,
one of the most important exhibitions of the decade. His work was almost
always figurative, usually featuring women, though he also painted some
religious compositions, still lifes, and a very few landscapes. Artemoff’s work was clearly influenced by his famous friends, though his own unique style makes his work readily identifiable. Artemoff died in 1965. A retrospective exhibition in Toulouse, France in 1992 celebrated 100 years since his birth. |