JEAN DESPUJOLS

"DANS LA FORET"

OIL ON CANVAS, SIGNED

FRENCH, C.1930

31.5 X 25.25

Jean Despujols
1886-1965

Jean Despujols was born in Salles, in the Bordeaux region of France.

Despujols was a student in Bordeaux and then in Paris. In 1914 he won the prestigious Prix de Rome. He was a soldier on the front in World War One, where he did many sketches of his experiences.

Despujols exhibited at the Salon des Tuileries, Salon des Indépendants, Salon des Artistes Français. He won many prizes. He exhibited in Copenhagen, London, Amsterdam, Tokyo, and Geneva.

In 1923 he bacame a professor at l’Académie Americaine des Beaux-Arts, at Fontainebleau. He continued to paint and exhibit for the next decade.

Despujols traveled to Indochina in 1937-38 on an official mission to document, in art, his experiences. He produced more than three hundred works that were exhibited at l’Orangerie des Tuileries, unfortunately this corresponded with the declaration of war in 1939. His paintings, journals, and musical compositions, became the subject of a documentary film produced by the Meadows Museum of Art, in Louisiana, in 1984. In 2003, this same museum assembled an exhibition in of these works.

Despujols’ work must be categorized as neo-classical, in the tradition of Raphael, but with a decidedly modern flavor. Like his contemporary Bordeaux colleagues, Jean Dupas, Robert Poughéon, and Raphëel Delorme, he saw the world in utopian ideals that flourished between the wars. It is astounding, the optimism shown by these artists after experiencing “the war to end all wars.” Posing his models in idyllic scenes of beauty, and using his fine brush strokes and unusual colors he created a world of imagination. This “Bordeaux School” style was incorporated into interiors of the great designers of the Art Deco period.