My website

Showing posts with label Chaïm Soutine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chaïm Soutine. Show all posts

Friday, July 16, 2010

Chaïm Soutine

It's time again for another mini-art history lesson.
Today's subject is Chaim Soutine.

Chaim Soutine (1893 –1943) was a Jewish painter from Belarus, which is now part of Russia.
At 20 years old, he and his friends moved to La Ruche, a home for poor struggling artists in Paris.
Although he was starving half the time, Chaim liked to paint rotten meat.
People complained that his room stunk, but he didn't care.

He just kept on painting rotten meat.

If he were alive today, he would have the last laugh.
His rotten carcass paintings now sell for millions of dollars.

One sold for a record 13 million bucks.
Of-course this is long after his death. When he was alive they were probably worth nothing.

He painted lots of things that weren't rotten, but this wasn't one of them.


I imagine this sting ray was particularly florid.

He seldom showed his work, but in 1937 he was part of a huge painting exhibition in which he was hailed as a great painter.
Hurray!

Enter World War Two and the fact that he was Jewish.
Boo!

Chaim was forced to hide out from the Nazis.
He lived outdoors, sleeping in forests or in bushes... in the rain, in the snow.

To make matters worse, he suffered from a badly bleeding stomach ulcer. Yuck.

He died from this stomach ulcer on August 9th, 1943.
He was 49 years old.