Skip to main content

Gaston Sébire Furniture

3
to
3
3
3
3
1
3
2
2
3
3
2
1
3
3
1
5,289
4,012
2,455
2,235
Creator: Gaston Sébire
Pitcher with Flowers, Oil on Canvas, Gaston Sébire (1920-2001)
By Gaston Sébire 2
Located in Palm Desert, CA
This is a stunning oil on canvas by Gaston Sébire entitled, "Le Bouquet de Paquerettes", Pitcher With Flowers. Depicted is a pitcher with a handle holding what appears to be daisies and grasses.The pitcher and flowers stand out against the black and brown background. His thoughtful attention to detail can be seen in the fallen flowers...
Category

1960s French Mid-Century Modern Vintage Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Canvas, Wood, Paint

Landscape with Figures by Gaston Sebire
By Gaston Sébire 2
Located in Sheffield, MA
Gaston Sebire French, 1920-2002 Landscape with figures Oil on canvas 31 by 41 ½ in. With frame 38 by 48 ½ in. Signed lower right Gaston Sebire (1920 – 2002) Gaston Sebire, was one of Europe’s leading landscapists, was born in the village of Saint-Samson in Normandy in 1920. A self taught artist, he began to paint seriously at the age of eighteen. For eight years he worked as a postal clerk in the Rouen, sorting letters at night in order to support his career as a painter. In 1952 Gaston Sebire had his first exhibition at the Galerie Gosselin in Paris. The following years he enjoyed the double triumph of winning both the coveted Prix de la Critique and the Prix Casa Velasquez. The Latter award made it possible for him to spend a year and a half in Spain. Of this formative period he said, “They were my first, wonderful years without worry. For fifteen years I had never known what the next day would bring.” The year 1957 marked another important stage in his career. His painting “La Dinde” won the Greenshields Prize in a field of 136 competitors, making it possible for him to paint for another two years without the worry of finances. Winning the awards naturally drew public attention to the artist from Normandy, and his works were presented in highly successful one-man shows in Paris. Sebire was a Norman, a man strongly attached to the soil, and after his exhibitions in Paris, he returned to Rouen to his large house overlooking the town and once again plunged into painting the countryside. Gaston Sebire was a strongly built man with square hands and a rather heavy walk. He had immense vitality, and used that to his advantage.  As he said of himself, “When the snow falls, I can’t stay indoors. I set out with my paint box. I paint outdoors from nine in the morning until five at night. If it were only a question of money, one could just as well paint in one’s own room.” But Sebire went into the countryside, or into the village, and sets up his easel. When there is a café into which people are going; there is a fence, a telegraph pole, a few buildings in the background. The scene takes on life, vivid life, with a sense of some event about to take place in the scene. Like many artists, and like a typical Norman, Sebire was silent and solitary by nature, with a personality as strong and Frank as his paintings. A painting, he says, “must have an element of mystery, show an effort to look beyond the aura surface of things.” Sebire’s early paintings were somber with much use of black and white tones. In 1970 he turned to colour. The subtle light of the Normandy skies; the shifting light and color along the seacoast; the magnificent blues of the Rouen pottery...
Category

1960s French Vintage Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Canvas

Gaston Sebire Signed French Oil Landscape
By Gaston Sébire 2
Located in Locust Valley, NY
French artist, Gaston Sebire, signed oil painting, "Fin de Journee" the end of the day farm field scene. Wide gold frame with linen liner. Canvas measures 17.75" H x 25.25" W.
Category

20th Century French Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Canvas, Paint

Related Items
Modern Signed Painting French Riviera Landscape
By William Langley
Located in Roma, IT
Very rare painting oil on canvas by the artist William Langley Title “View of Menton Cap Martin” It depicts a beautiful view of the French Riviera, in particular Cap Martin-Menton O...
Category

Early 20th Century French Modern Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Canvas, Wood

Antique French Landscape Oil Painting on Linen Signed Baldy, Original Gilt Frame
Located in Chicago, IL
Antique French Landscape oil painting, on linen, signed Baldy, in what appears to be its original gilt frame. Probably painted in...
Category

1910s French Vintage Gaston Sébire Furniture

Mountain Landscape with Lake, Oil on Canvas Paintings, Alps, 1920
Located in Albignasego, IT
Konigssee Measures: 30 cm x 40 cm (without frame) - oil on canvas, 1920s 11.8 in x 15.7 in (without frame). Painting depicting the Königssee, probably the most famous German alpine...
Category

1920s German Vintage Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Canvas

Mid-Century G. Rovatti Oil Painting on Canvas River Landscape W Figures
Located in Dayton, OH
Mid century oil on canvas landscape painting showing a tree lined river with two figures washing linens. Signed in the lower left G. Rovatti. Measures: 21” x 1.75” x 17” / Sans fr...
Category

Mid-20th Century Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Canvas, Paint

Danish Flower Painter, Oil on Canvas, Still Life with Flowers and Fruits
Located in Copenhagen, DK
Danish flower painter. Oil on canvas. Still life with flowers and fruits, late 19th century. The canvas measures: 37 x 32.5 cm. The frame measures: 6.5...
Category

Late 19th Century Danish Antique Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Canvas

Oil on Canvas Still Life of Flowers
Located in Cheshire, GB
Still life of flowers signed J van Neesen encased in gilt frame. Dimensions Height 30.5 inches Width 26 inches Depth 1.5 inches.
Category

Mid-20th Century Dutch Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Paint

Oil on Canvas Still Life of Flowers
Oil on Canvas Still Life of Flowers
H 30.5 in W 26 in D 1.5 in
Pascal Cucaro Mid-Century Impressionist Painting of Figures
By Pascal Cucaro, 1915-2003
Located in Rio Vista, CA
Mid-Century Modern painting of a busy impressionist scene with interesting colorful figures by Pascal Cucaro (American 1915-2003). The painting features vivid shades of blue and red ...
Category

20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Linen, Wood, Paint

Landscape Painting by Irene Cafieri
Located in Pasadena, TX
Irene Cafieri Contemporary Oil on Canvas 1970s Measures: 36″ X 24″ Lovely landscape by contemporary artist.
Category

Mid-20th Century European Romantic Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Acrylic

Vintage Original Signed G Whitman Landscape Oil Painting
Located in Lake Worth, FL
For FULL item description click on CONTINUE READING at the bottom of this page. Offering One Of Our Recent Palm Beach Estate Fine Art Acquisitions Of A Vintage Huge 48" Original Signed G Whitman...
Category

20th Century Unknown Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Canvas, Paint, Wood

Oil on Canvas Still Life of Flowers
Located in Cheshire, GB
Still life of flowers signed J van Neesen encased in gilt frame. Dimensions: Height 26 inches Width 22 inches Depth 2 inches.
Category

Mid-20th Century Dutch Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Paint

19th Century Egyptian Figures Continental Oil on Canvas
Located in North Miami, FL
A pair of early 19th Century Continental School Oil on canvas. One portrays Egyptian Figures at a table with Hieroglyphics, and the other one a flute player and a singer. The scenes are from a funerary banquet, from the Tomb of Nenkhef. Both are framed in matching silver gild...
Category

18th Century Egyptian Antique Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Canvas, Paint

Oil on Canvas Still Life of Flowers
Located in Cheshire, GB
Still life with flowers in a vase, oil on canvas, signed Manuela Bonati encased in carved frame. Dimensions Height 28 Inches Width 24 Inches Depth 2 Inches.
Category

Early 20th Century Italian Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Paint

Previously Available Items
Gaston Sebire Signed Oil Painting
By Gaston Sébire 2
Located in Locust Valley, NY
Oil painting signed by Gaston Sebire, a still life of flowers in a Chinese vase in a gilt frame with linen mat. Image dimensions 28.25" x 19".
Category

20th Century French Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Paint

Gaston Sebire Signed Oil Painting
Gaston Sebire Signed Oil Painting
H 36.5 in W 27 in D 2 in
Oil on Canvas Beach Scene Painting by Gaston Sebire
By Gaston Sébire 2
Located in Chicago, IL
An impressionistic oil on canvas painting depicting a beach scene by Gaston Sebire. (French/ American b. 1920 d. 2001.) Signed lower right corner.
Category

Mid-20th Century American Gaston Sébire Furniture

Materials

Paint

Figures in a Flowering Garden by Gaston Sebire
By Gaston Sébire 2
Located in Sheffield, MA
Gaston Sebire French, 1920-2002 Figures in a flowering garden Oil on canvas 25 by 31 in. With frame 33 ½ by 39 ½ in. Signed lower right Gaston Sebire (1920 – 2002) Gaston Sebire, was one of Europe’s leading landscapists, was born in the village of Saint-Samson in Normandy in 1920. A self taught artist, he began to paint seriously at the age of eighteen. For eight years he worked as a postal clerk in the Rouen, sorting letters at night in order to support his career as a painter. In 1952 Gaston Sebire had his first exhibition at the Galerie Gosselin in Paris. The following years he enjoyed the double triumph of winning both the coveted Prix de la Critique and the Prix Casa Velasquez. The Latter award made it possible for him to spend a year and a half in Spain. Of this formative period he said, “They were my first, wonderful years without worry. For fifteen years I had never known what the next day would bring.” The year 1957 marked another important stage in his career. His painting “La Dinde” won the Greenshields Prize in a field of 136 competitors, making it possible for him to paint for another two years without the worry of finances. Winning the awards naturally drew public attention to the artist from Normandy, and his works were presented in highly successful one-man shows in Paris. Sebire was a Norman, a man strongly attached to the soil, and after his exhibitions in Paris, he returned to Rouen to his large house overlooking the town and once again plunged into painting the countryside. Gaston Sebire was a strongly built man with square hands and a rather heavy walk. He had immense vitality, and used that to his advantage.  As he said of himself, “When the snow falls, I can’t stay indoors. I set out with my paint box. I paint outdoors from nine in the morning until five at night. If it were only a question of money, one could just as well paint in one’s own room.” But Sebire went into the countryside, or into the village, and sets up his easel. When there is a café into which people are going; there is a fence, a telegraph pole, a few buildings in the background. The scene takes on life, vivid life, with a sense of some event about to take place in the scene. Like many artists, and like a typical Norman, Sebire was silent and solitary by nature, with a personality as strong and Frank as his paintings. A painting, he says, “must have an element of mystery, show an effort to look beyond the aura surface of things.” Sebire’s early paintings were somber with much use of black and white tones. In 1970 he turned to colour. The subtle light of the Normandy skies; the shifting light and color along the seacoast; the magnificent blues of the Rouen pottery...
Category

1970s French Vintage Gaston Sébire Furniture

"At the Seaside" Oil on Canvas by Gaston Sebire
By Gaston Sébire 2
Located in Sheffield, MA
Gaston Sebire French, 1920-2002 At the seaside Oil on canvas Measures: 25 by 31 in. With frame 33 ½ by 39 ½ in. Signed lower right Gaston Sebire (1920 – 2002) Gaston Sebire, was one of Europe’s leading landscapists, was born in the village of Saint-Samson in Normandy in 1920. A self taught artist, he began to paint seriously at the age of eighteen. For eight years he worked as a postal clerk in the Rouen, sorting letters at night in order to support his career as a painter. In 1952 Gaston Sebire had his first exhibition at the Galerie Gosselin in Paris. The following years he enjoyed the double triumph of winning both the coveted Prix de la Critique and the Prix Casa Velasquez. The Latter award made it possible for him to spend a year and a half in Spain. Of this formative period he said, “They were my first, wonderful years without worry. For fifteen years I had never known what the next day would bring.” The year 1957 marked another important stage in his career. His painting “La Dinde” won the Greenshields Prize in a field of 136 competitors, making it possible for him to paint for another two years without the worry of finances. Winning the awards naturally drew public attention to the artist from Normandy, and his works were presented in highly successful one-man shows in Paris. Sebire was a Norman, a man strongly attached to the soil, and after his exhibitions in Paris, he returned to Rouen to his large house overlooking the town and once again plunged into painting the countryside. Gaston Sebire was a strongly built man with square hands and a rather heavy walk. He had immense vitality, and used that to his advantage.  As he said of himself, “When the snow falls, I can’t stay indoors. I set out with my paint box. I paint outdoors from nine in the morning until five at night. If it were only a question of money, one could just as well paint in one’s own room.” But Sebire went into the countryside, or into the village, and sets up his easel. When there is a café into which people are going; there is a fence, a telegraph pole, a few buildings in the background. The scene takes on life, vivid life, with a sense of some event about to take place in the scene. Like many artists, and like a typical Norman, Sebire was silent and solitary by nature, with a personality as strong and Frank as his paintings. A painting, he says, “must have an element of mystery, show an effort to look beyond the aura surface of things.” Sebire’s early paintings were somber with much use of black and white tones. In 1970 he turned to colour. The subtle light of the Normandy skies; the shifting light and color along the seacoast; the magnificent blues of the Rouen pottery...
Category

1960s French Vintage Gaston Sébire Furniture

"Rencontre a la Plage" Painting by Gaston Sebire
By Gaston Sébire 2
Located in Sheffield, MA
Gaston Sebire, French, 1920-2002, "At The Seaside." Oil on canvas. Measures: 25 by 31 in. with frame 33 ½ by 39 ½ in. Signed lower right. Gaston Sebire (1920–2002) Gaston Sebire, was one of Europe’s leading landscapists, was born in the village of Saint-Samson in Normandy in 1920. A self taught artist, he began to paint seriously at the age of eighteen. For eight years he worked as a postal clerk in the Rouen, sorting letters at night in order to support his career as a painter. In 1952 Gaston Sebire had his first exhibition at the Galerie Gosselin in Paris. The following years he enjoyed the double triumph of winning both the coveted Prix de la Critique and the Prix Casa Velasquez. The Latter award made it possible for him to spend a year and a half in Spain. Of this formative period he said, “They were my first, wonderful years without worry. For fifteen years I had never known what the next day would bring.” The year 1957 marked another important stage in his career. His painting “La Dinde” won the Greenshields Prize in a field of 136 competitors, making it possible for him to paint for another two years without the worry of finances. Winning the awards naturally drew public attention to the artist from Normandy, and his works were presented in highly successful one-man shows in Paris. Sebire was a Norman, a man strongly attached to the soil, and after his exhibitions in Paris, he returned to Rouen to his large house overlooking the town and once again plunged into painting the countryside. Gaston Sebire was a strongly built man with square hands and a rather heavy walk. He had immense vitality, and used that to his advantage.  As he said of himself, “When the snow falls, I can’t stay indoors. I set out with my paint box. I paint outdoors from nine in the morning until five at night. If it were only a question of money, one could just as well paint in one’s own room.” But Sebire went into the countryside, or into the village, and sets up his easel. When there is a café into which people are going; there is a fence, a telegraph pole, a few buildings in the background. The scene takes on life, vivid life, with a sense of some event about to take place in the scene. Like many artists, and like a typical Norman, Sebire was silent and solitary by nature, with a personality as strong and frank as his paintings. A painting, he says, “must have an element of mystery, show an effort to look beyond the aura surface of things.” Sebire’s early paintings were somber with much use of black and white tones. In 1970 he turned to colour. The subtle light of the Normandy skies; the shifting light and color along the seacoast; the magnificent blues of the Rouen pottery...
Category

Mid-20th Century French Gaston Sébire Furniture

Gaston Sébire furniture for sale on 1stDibs.

Gaston Sébire furniture are available for sale on 1stDibs. These distinctive items are frequently made of paint and are designed with extraordinary care. There are many options to choose from in our collection of Gaston Sébire furniture, although brown editions of this piece are particularly popular. If you’re looking for additional options, many customers also consider furniture by Jean Salabet, Elisée Maclet, and Gio Colucci. Prices for Gaston Sébire furniture can differ depending upon size, time period and other attributes — on 1stDibs, these items begin at $2,400 and can go as high as $12,600, while a piece like these, on average, fetch $5,710.

Recently Viewed

View All