Jean Paul Lemieux R.C.A.
Portrait of a Young Lady, c. 1963
|
|
signed lower left
Provenance
Waddington & Gorce Inc., Montreal;
Arthur Legget Fine Art & Antiques, Toronto;
Private collection
Peter Ohler Fine Arts Ltd., Vancouver
Masters Gallery Ltd., Calgary
Private collection
Jean-Paul Lemieux, painter (b at Québec C, Qué 18 Nov 1904; d at Montréal, Qué 7 Nov 1990). Lemieux’s artistic universe is often classified as one of northern landscapes, flat, barren and infinite, but this preoccupation was only one characteristic of his work. He attended the École des beaux-arts in…
Jean-Paul Lemieux, painter (b at Québec C, Qué 18 Nov 1904; d at Montréal, Qué 7 Nov 1990). Lemieux’s artistic universe is often classified as one of northern landscapes, flat, barren and infinite, but this preoccupation was only one characteristic of his work. He attended the École des beaux-arts in Montréal from 1926-34, interrupted by a trip to Paris. After teaching at the École du meuble, he moved to the École des beaux-arts in Québec in 1937, remaining there until 1965. His work drew inspiration from Québec City and from Île aux Coudres, Charlevoix County, for which he held particular affection. His first paintings reflected daily life, portraits of relatives and familiar landscapes.
In the 1940s, Lemieux’s canvases (Lazare, 1941; La Fête-Dieu Québec, 1944) painted in fresco style summarized the attitudes of a people. His organization of subject and space was at that time influenced by the Italian primitivist school and early Québec folk art, which he collected avidly. Gradually his treatment of his subjects became simplified and his style more geometric. It was not, however, a stiff geometry, for the lines still vibrate, and colours are either transparent or pastel. Space opens up (Le Train de midi, 1956), and against a line of horizon appear hieratic figures (L’Été, 1959). Part of and yet distinct from the background, his figures evoke a world of dream and memory.
Often meditative and serious, Lemieux’s art can sometimes be humorous and lyrical, as in his illustrations of Gabrielle Roy’s books. His work is regularly exhibited in Canada and internationally, and he painted a number of commissioned portraits of public figures. In 1985 Lemieux published a limited edition bilingual collection of prints – one for each province and territory – entitled Canada-Canada.
Source: The Canadian Encyclopedia, Author: Laurier Lacroix