Skip to main content

Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

to
1
Overall Width
to
Overall Height
to
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
757
754
754
666
1
1
Artist: Edmond Aman-Jean
Elegant Women - Impressionist Figures in Interior Oil by Edmond Aman-Jean
Elegant Women - Impressionist Figures in Interior Oil by Edmond Aman-Jean

Elegant Women - Impressionist Figures in Interior Oil by Edmond Aman-Jean

By Edmond Aman-Jean

Located in Marlow, Buckinghamshire

Signed oil on canvas by French impressionist painter Edmond Francois Aman-Jean. The piece depicts an elegant woman in a purple dress with her assistant. Signature: Signed lower left...

Category

1910s Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Related Items
"Portrait of Louis Prang" William Merritt Chase, Impressionist Portrait
"Portrait of Louis Prang" William Merritt Chase, Impressionist Portrait

"Portrait of Louis Prang" William Merritt Chase, Impressionist Portrait

By William Merritt Chase

Located in New York, NY

William Merritt Chase Portrait of Louis Prang, 1884 Signed center right "WM M Chase" Oil on canvas 41 1/2 x 30 1/2 inches Provenance The artist Louis Prang Gift from the sitter to R...

Category

1880s American Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

"Riviera".  Contemporary French Figurative Oil Painting
"Riviera".  Contemporary French Figurative Oil Painting

"Riviera". Contemporary French Figurative Oil Painting

By Marie-Hélène Mouyon

Located in Brecon, Powys

Very colourful oil on canvas from well known French artist & illustrator Marie-Helene Mouyon who has exhibited in Paris. This idyllic Summer scene shows a reclining figure resting using the yellow hat to give shade from the hot afternoon...

Category

1990s Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Yu Xia Portrait Original Oil On Canvas "Woman Next To Window"
Yu Xia Portrait Original Oil On Canvas "Woman Next To Window"

Yu Xia Portrait Original Oil On Canvas "Woman Next To Window"

Located in New York, NY

Title: Woman Next To Window Medium: Oil on canvas Size: 11.5 x 7.5 inches Frame: Framing options available! Condition: The painting appears to be in excellent condition. Note: This p...

Category

21st Century and Contemporary Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Rock Me Baby  Oil 14 x 20 Framed  Water Movement  Figurative Portraiture
Rock Me Baby  Oil 14 x 20 Framed  Water Movement  Figurative Portraiture

Rock Me Baby Oil 14 x 20 Framed Water Movement Figurative Portraiture

Located in Houston, TX

LOOK FOR FREE SHIPPING AT CHECKOUT Rock Me is a 14 x 20 figurative oil painting by E. Melinda Morrison. It was painted in 2019. Rock Me shows the movement of the water rocking the ...

Category

2010s Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil, Egg Tempera, Panel

Portrait of the painter Wilda Leiner in Oil on Canvas
Portrait of the painter Wilda Leiner in Oil on Canvas

Portrait of the painter Wilda Leiner in Oil on Canvas

By Cor de Gavere

Located in Soquel, CA

Portrait of The Pianist Wilda Leiner in Oil on Canvas A beautiful portrait of a woman named Wilda Leiner, a pianist (1908-1994) by longtime Santa Cruz, CA resident Cor de Gavere. S...

Category

1930s American Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Ignacio Gil Sala – Ibiza Market Scene, 1960s – Large Spanish Mediterranean Oil
Ignacio Gil Sala – Ibiza Market Scene, 1960s – Large Spanish Mediterranean Oil

Ignacio Gil Sala – Ibiza Market Scene, 1960s – Large Spanish Mediterranean Oil

By Ignacio Gil Sala

Located in Sitges, Barcelona

This large oil on canvas by Spanish painter Ignacio Gil Sala, created circa 1960 in Ibiza, Balearic Islands, represents a traditional Mediterranean market scene and stands as a signi...

Category

1960s Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Impressionist Painting of a Bohemian Woman Budapest 1925  Bertha De Hellebranth
Impressionist Painting of a Bohemian Woman Budapest 1925  Bertha De Hellebranth

Impressionist Painting of a Bohemian Woman Budapest 1925 Bertha De Hellebranth

Located in Rochester, NY

Bohemian woman Budapest, Hungary 1925 by Bertha De Hellebranth. Fabulous period painting brings to life the bohemian intelligentsia of Europe in the 1920's. I believe the painting is of the artists sister Elena Maria De Hellebranth. Both sisters were accomplished artist and worked and exhibited together. See the photo of the sisters Elena on the left and Bertha on the right. Oil on canvas. In a period frame. Signed lower right. Inscribed on reverse. Provenance: label from Newman Galleries Philadelphia. BIOGRAPHY ; Bertha de Hellebranth and her sister Elena were born into a cultured upper-class family in Budapest, Bertha in 1899, Elena in 1897. Their father was a lawyer and their mother a student of Franz Liszt's last living pupil. Both sisters showed artistic potential early, beginning to paint at four or five years of age. Their parents encouraged them, and had the means to send them to the best art schools of the time. They studied at the Academy of Fine Art in Budapest, at the Académie Julian and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière in Paris, and painted portraits of European nobility. As Patricia Fazekas points out, "Growing up in a family of privilege, they seemed to have unusual access to many illustrious people." So we should not be surprised to find among their subjects members of high society, such as Count Andrássy Gyula, the Russian-born Princess Baby Galitzine, and Admiral Horthy Miklós, the Regent. Later on, their subjects included American heiress Gladys Vanderbilt (Countess László Széchenyi), President Theodore Roosevelt's granddaughter Paulina Longworth and former President Dwight D. Eisenhower.Often, the sisters would paint the same subject at the same time, offering the sitter a choice of portraits. Most often, the sitter wanted both renditions.While Elena concentrated on working in oil and watercolor, Bertha used gouache and oil to achieve her effects. Elena gave lectures and workshops, was a writer and also wrote popular and ecclesiastical music, while Bertha also went in for sculpture and handicrafts.From the mid-thirties until World War II, Bertha and Elena divided their time between their home in Budapest and a home on the ocean at Ventnor, NJ. In 1925, they showed their work at the Nemzeti Szalon in Budapest, and in 1926, they had a joint exhibition of their portraits in the US. Both exhibited their work at the Art Institute of Chicago, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and most major museums and galleries in the US. Bertha also had exhibits at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Both Bertha and Elena were Fellows of the Royal Society of Art (London), and garnered numerous prizes. Bertha was awarded First Prize by the National Academy of the American Water Color Society one year, and the Grand Prize of the Audubon Society. She was one of the founders of the now defunct World League of Hungarian Artists Abroad (Külföldi Magyar Képz?m?vészek Világszövetsége), and received a Gold Medal from the Cleveland Árpád Akadémia in 1963. (Elena also received the Akadémia's gold medal in 1965.) Their work is found in museums and galleries too numerous to mention.The de Hellebranth sisters were devout Catholics, and this is evident in their many portraits of clerics...

Category

Early 20th Century Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Fabric, Canvas, Oil

"James" Impressionistic Black & White James Dean Portrait Oil Painting on Canvas
"James" Impressionistic Black & White James Dean Portrait Oil Painting on Canvas

"James" Impressionistic Black & White James Dean Portrait Oil Painting on Canvas

By Cindy Shaoul

Located in New York, NY

A stunning depiction of James Dean done in an abstract impressionistic manner with a heavy use of paint and we also can find bold strokes of white, gray and black. Creating a black a...

Category

2010s American Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

John Burroughs at Roxbury, Catskills Cabin Definitive Life Study American Artist
John Burroughs at Roxbury, Catskills Cabin Definitive Life Study American Artist

John Burroughs at Roxbury, Catskills Cabin Definitive Life Study American Artist

Located in Norwich, GB

Formally documented in The Life and Letters of John Burroughs (Vol. II, p. 168), this monumental canvas is not merely a portrait; it is a primary historical document. Painted in 1911...

Category

1910s American Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

"J'adore Paris" I love Paris Impressionistic Oil Painting Woman Portrait Framed
"J'adore Paris" I love Paris Impressionistic Oil Painting Woman Portrait Framed

"J'adore Paris" I love Paris Impressionistic Oil Painting Woman Portrait Framed

By Cindy Shaoul

Located in New York, NY

This painting depicts an impressionistic close-up portrait of a young woman featuring thick brushstrokes and a painterly texture, with long and wavy hair in shades of reddish-blonde ...

Category

2010s American Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Portrait of a Young Man in Striped Shirt
Portrait of a Young Man in Striped Shirt

Paul SorelPortrait of a Young Man in Striped Shirt, 1964

$2,280Sale Price|20% Off

H 34.38 in W 28.13 in D 1.5 in

Portrait of a Young Man in Striped Shirt

Located in Soquel, CA

Wonderful 1965 portrait of a young man (possibly the artist Don Bachardy) in a striped shirt looking back over his shoulder by Paul Sorel (American, b- 1920...

Category

1960s Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Previously Available Items
Femme a la toilette - Symbolist Oil, Figures in Interior by Edmond Aman-Jean
Femme a la toilette - Symbolist Oil, Figures in Interior by Edmond Aman-Jean

Femme a la toilette - Symbolist Oil, Figures in Interior by Edmond Aman-Jean

By Edmond Aman-Jean

Located in Marlow, Buckinghamshire

Large signed and dated figurative oil on canvas by French symbolist painter Edmond Francois Aman-Jean. The piece depicts a seated a beautiful young woman wearing a blue floral dressing gown having her long brunette hair brushed by her maid wearing her black uniform with white apron. Signature: Signed and dated 1916 upper left Dimensions: Framed: 38"x33" Unframed: 29"x24" Provenance: Private UK collection Edmond Aman-Jean spent his early childhood in St-Amand, where his father ran an inland water transport company. Both his parents died before he was ten years old, and he went to live with his uncle in Paris. After a classical education at a Jesuit school, he started working at the studio of the sculptor Justin Lequien, where George Seurat was a fellow pupil. In 1878, with Seurat, he enrolled at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, studying under Henri Lehmann, who also taught Pissarro. There, Aman-Jean, Ernest Laurent and Seurat realised they had a shared interest in Impressionism and consequently decided to leave the school. The pencil portrait of Aman-Jean by Seurat is a moving testimony to the intensity of his early years. At the Salon of 1881 he discovered Puvis de Chavannes, and from around 1883 he worked with him, assisting on Sacred Grove, which adorns a wall of the main staircase of the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Lyons. He won his first award at the Salon in 1883, and in 1885 he was given a travel scholarship to Rome, where he went with Ernest Laurent and Henri Martin. After joining Stéphane Mallarmé's Cercle des Mardis, he was asked to participate in the Salon de la Rose-Croix in 1892 and 1893. It was around this time that he struck up a friendship with Verlaine that was to endure until his death. He stopped exhibiting at the Salon des Artistes Français, which he considered too conventional, and began exhibiting regularly at the Salon de la Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, becoming a member in 1893, and chairman of the painting section in 1914, 1921 and 1922. From 1896 to 1897 he went on a long trip to Italy with his wife, staying in Naples and Amalfi. In 1889 he won a silver medal, and in 1900 was awarded a gold medal at the Exposition Universelle. On that occasion he was also made a Chevalier of the Légion d'Honneur (he was later made an Officier, then in 1933 a Commandeur, as well as an Officier de l'Ordre de Léopold de Belgique). From 1899 onwards he often exhibited with the Société des Pastellistes de France. In 1899 he founded the Société Nouvelle de Peintres et Sculpteurs, which exhibited at the Galerie Georges Petit for 14 years. Around the turn of the century he travelled to Munich, Holland, Belgium and England and to Vienna as a guest of the Secession. He also made many trips to Italy. From 1902 onwards he was frequently invited to the USA to produce commissioned portraits of numerous public figures, as well as murals in a number of towns. He was also invited to exhibit there, notably at the Carnegie International in Pittsburgh until 1914, where he was on the judging panel. He even organised an exhibition of French art between 1911 and 1912 which took place in Buffalo, St Louis and Pittsburgh. In 1912 he took part in the new Salon de la Triennale with, among others, Maurice Denis and Renoir. In 1913 he was appointed curator of the La Fontaine museum in Château-Thierry. Also in 1913 he published his paper on Velazquez, which was an immediate success. His work was interrupted by World War I. For four years he stayed in Château-Thierry, which fell under German occupation, and almost ceased painting altogether. After 1922 he left the Société Nationale and founded the Salon des Tuileries together with Albert Besnard, who became its chairman, with Aman-Jean and Bourdelle as vice-chairmen. He very rarely had solo exhibitions, but exhibited jointly with René Ménard at the Galerie Georges Petit in 1925. In 1936 a major exhibition was held at the Salon des Tuileries in his honour. Since his death he has been represented at collective exhibitions of the works of his era. The Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris held a retrospective of his work in 1970; the Musée de la Chartreuse in Douai and the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Carcassonne hosted the exhibition Dreams of Women, Edmond Aman-Jean in 2003 and 2004. In the 1880s he had produced engravings and lithographs. His lithographs were a big success. He made little effort to distribute his etchings. He was a careful draughtsman, working in charcoal, lithographic pencil, coloured chalk and pastels. He produced decorative compositions, most of them destined for various public buildings in Paris: St Julian the Nurse in 1883, Joan of Arc in 1885, The Park in 1901 for the town hall in Château-Thierry, four panels for the Marsan wing of the Louvre in 1908-1909, and painted The Four Elements for the chemistry lecture theatre at the Sorbonne in 1912, after which the parliament of Chile commissioned four large panels for the parliamentary palace. For a while after his studies at the École des Beaux-Arts, Aman-Jean practised Seurat's technique of divisionism, but he soon reverted to a 'flat' style as he tackled his first few commissions for decorative compositions. During his stay in Naples and Amalfi in 1896 and 1897, the harsher light enabled him to discover more vibrant colours, and he took to using these in moderation during this first period of maturity. Gradually from 1912 onwards his work began to reflect a sensitivity to the intimate charm of Bonnard's work. Today, this intimist part of his output is more appreciated, although it surprised those around him at the time. Works include portraits of women at home: Portrait of Miss S. Poncet, Portrait of Mrs. Juliette Second, and some anonymous young women with dreamy, melancholy demeanours: Confiding Secrets, Waiting and Woman with a Peacock, in which we witness both the supple rigour of his drawing and the colour harmonies, muted again but punctuated with brighter notes, which especially characterise his later work. The critic Roger Marx thought, with respect to these young women, that 'the unfathomable mystery of the eyes and the vague smile suggest the flight of troubled thought', although it is true that art criticism leaned towards psychological explanation at the time. He also depicted numerous nudes, no longer portrayed as allegories, but displaying a healthy sensuality, particularly in his drawings from 1906-1907 onwards, which testify clearly to his interest in femininity. Museum and Gallery Holdings: Aix-les-Bains (Mus. Faure): Woman with a Black Hat (1900); Woman with a Pink Shawl (c. 1905, pastel); Reverie, Nude Study (c. 1907, charcoal and watercolour); Woman in a Dressing Gown (c. 1915, pastel); Bather with Rose (c. 1925) Amsterdam (Van Gogh Mus.): Pensive Young Woman, Portrait of Thadée Aman-Jean (1892) Brest: St Genevieve outside Paris (1885) Bucharest: Confiding Secrets (1908) Buenos Aires: Woman with Blue Vase Carcassonne: St Julian L'Hospitalier (1882); Doubter (1900) Château-Thierry: The Violinist (c. 1905, pastel); Woman with a Coral Necklace, Miss Ella Carmichael (c. 1908); Portrait of Dr. Ernest de Massary (1914); Portrait of Mme Ladureau (1933) Château-Thierry (Town Hall): The Park (1901, in collaboration with Aubert) Cincinnati (AM): Merry Woman (La Rieuse) (engraving) Cleveland (MA): Meditation (1891) Dijon (MBA): Merry Woman (c. 1897, lithograph); Hair (c. 1898, lithograph); Reverie (c. 1898, pastel); Woman with Glove (1902, pastel); Head of a Woman in a White Hat (1902, pastel); Portrait of a Woman, Mme Ernest Chausson (1902); Line Aman-Jean Dressed as Marie-Antoinette (1903); Still-life (c. 1905); Little Girl in the Meadows Douai: Privacy, Reading (1904); Goodbye to the Swallows (1923); Resting after the Duet (1924); Raining Stars (c. 1925) Gray: Young Woman with Yellow Scarf (1895); Woman with White Glove (1898, pastel); La Pierreuse (1898, pastel); Study of a Woman (c. 1905, charcoal, pastel and distemper); Young Girl with Flowers (c. 1905); Study of a Reclining Nude (c. 1905, charcoal, chalk and watercolour); Woman in a Straw Hat (c. 1905, pastel); Nude with a Hat (1906, charcoal and pastel); Portrait of Mr Edmond Pigalle (1906, charcoal and pastel); Nude with Pergola (1906-1907, charcoal and pastel); Portrait of a Woman, Mme René-Jean (1907, charcoal and pastel); Young Woman with Blue Eyes (1920) Kurashiki (Ohara MA): Hair (c. 1910); Family Portrait (1913) Limoux (Mus. Petiet): Young Girl with Dog...

Category

1910s Symbolist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Elegant Women - Impressionist Oil, Figures in Interior Edmond Francois Aman-Jean
Elegant Women - Impressionist Oil, Figures in Interior Edmond Francois Aman-Jean

Elegant Women - Impressionist Oil, Figures in Interior Edmond Francois Aman-Jean

By Edmond Aman-Jean

Located in Marlow, Buckinghamshire

A large and stunning oil on canvas by French impressionist painter Edmond Francois Aman-Jean. The piece depicts an elegant woman in a purple dress with her assistant. Signature: Signed lower left Dimensions: Framed: 40"x33.5" Unframed: 30.5"x24" Provenance: Private French collection Edmond Aman-Jean spent his early childhood in St-Amand, where his father ran an inland water transport company. Both his parents died before he was ten years old, and he went to live with his uncle in Paris. After a classical education at a Jesuit school, he started working at the studio of the sculptor Justin Lequien, where George Seurat was a fellow pupil. In 1878, with Seurat, he enrolled at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, studying under Henri Lehmann, who also taught Pissarro. There, Aman-Jean, Ernest Laurent and Seurat realised they had a shared interest in Impressionism and consequently decided to leave the school. The pencil portrait of Aman-Jean by Seurat is a moving testimony to the intensity of his early years. At the Salon of 1881 he discovered Puvis de Chavannes, and from around 1883 he worked with him, assisting on Sacred Grove, which adorns a wall of the main staircase of the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Lyons. He won his first award at the Salon in 1883, and in 1885 he was given a travel scholarship to Rome, where he went with Ernest Laurent and Henri Martin. After joining Stéphane Mallarmé's Cercle des Mardis, he was asked to participate in the Salon de la Rose-Croix in 1892 and 1893. It was around this time that he struck up a friendship with Verlaine that was to endure until his death. He stopped exhibiting at the Salon des Artistes Français, which he considered too conventional, and began exhibiting regularly at the Salon de la Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, becoming a member in 1893, and chairman of the painting section in 1914, 1921 and 1922. From 1896 to 1897 he went on a long trip to Italy with his wife, staying in Naples and Amalfi. In 1889 he won a silver medal, and in 1900 was awarded a gold medal at the Exposition Universelle. On that occasion he was also made a Chevalier of the Légion d'Honneur (he was later made an Officier, then in 1933 a Commandeur, as well as an Officier de l'Ordre de Léopold de Belgique). From 1899 onwards he often exhibited with the Société des Pastellistes de France. In 1899 he founded the Société Nouvelle de Peintres et Sculpteurs, which exhibited at the Galerie Georges Petit for 14 years. Around the turn of the century he travelled to Munich, Holland, Belgium and England and to Vienna as a guest of the Secession. He also made many trips to Italy. From 1902 onwards he was frequently invited to the USA to produce commissioned portraits of numerous public figures, as well as murals in a number of towns. He was also invited to exhibit there, notably at the Carnegie International in Pittsburgh until 1914, where he was on the judging panel. He even organised an exhibition of French art between 1911 and 1912 which took place in Buffalo, St Louis and Pittsburgh. In 1912 he took part in the new Salon de la Triennale with, among others, Maurice Denis and Renoir. In 1913 he was appointed curator of the La Fontaine museum in Château-Thierry. Also in 1913 he published his paper on Velazquez, which was an immediate success. His work was interrupted by World War I. For four years he stayed in Château-Thierry, which fell under German occupation, and almost ceased painting altogether. After 1922 he left the Société Nationale and founded the Salon des Tuileries together with Albert Besnard, who became its chairman, with Aman-Jean and Bourdelle as vice-chairmen. He very rarely had solo exhibitions, but exhibited jointly with René Ménard at the Galerie Georges Petit in 1925. In 1936 a major exhibition was held at the Salon des Tuileries in his honour. Since his death he has been represented at collective exhibitions of the works of his era. The Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris held a retrospective of his work in 1970; the Musée de la Chartreuse in Douai and the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Carcassonne hosted the exhibition Dreams of Women, Edmond Aman-Jean in 2003 and 2004. In the 1880s he had produced engravings and lithographs. His lithographs were a big success. He made little effort to distribute his etchings. He was a careful draughtsman, working in charcoal, lithographic pencil, coloured chalk and pastels. He produced decorative compositions, most of them destined for various public buildings in Paris: St Julian the Nurse in 1883, Joan of Arc in 1885, The Park in 1901 for the town hall in Château-Thierry, four panels for the Marsan wing of the Louvre in 1908-1909, and painted The Four Elements for the chemistry lecture theatre at the Sorbonne in 1912, after which the parliament of Chile commissioned four large panels for the parliamentary palace. For a while after his studies at the École des Beaux-Arts, Aman-Jean practised Seurat's technique of divisionism, but he soon reverted to a 'flat' style as he tackled his first few commissions for decorative compositions. During his stay in Naples and Amalfi in 1896 and 1897, the harsher light enabled him to discover more vibrant colours, and he took to using these in moderation during this first period of maturity. Gradually from 1912 onwards his work began to reflect a sensitivity to the intimate charm of Bonnard's work. Today, this intimist part of his output is more appreciated, although it surprised those around him at the time. Works include portraits of women at home: Portrait of Miss S. Poncet, Portrait of Mrs. Juliette Second, and some anonymous young women with dreamy, melancholy demeanours: Confiding Secrets, Waiting and Woman with a Peacock, in which we witness both the supple rigour of his drawing and the colour harmonies, muted again but punctuated with brighter notes, which especially characterise his later work. The critic Roger Marx thought, with respect to these young women, that 'the unfathomable mystery of the eyes and the vague smile suggest the flight of troubled thought', although it is true that art criticism leaned towards psychological explanation at the time. He also depicted numerous nudes, no longer portrayed as allegories, but displaying a healthy sensuality, particularly in his drawings from 1906-1907 onwards, which testify clearly to his interest in femininity. Museum and Gallery Holdings: Aix-les-Bains (Mus. Faure): Woman with a Black Hat (1900); Woman with a Pink Shawl (c. 1905, pastel); Reverie, Nude Study (c. 1907, charcoal and watercolour); Woman in a Dressing Gown (c. 1915, pastel); Bather with Rose (c. 1925) Amsterdam (Van Gogh Mus.): Pensive Young Woman, Portrait of Thadée Aman-Jean (1892) Brest: St Genevieve outside Paris (1885) Bucharest: Confiding Secrets (1908) Buenos Aires: Woman with Blue Vase Carcassonne: St Julian L'Hospitalier (1882); Doubter (1900) Château-Thierry: The Violinist (c. 1905, pastel); Woman with a Coral Necklace, Miss Ella Carmichael (c. 1908); Portrait of Dr. Ernest de Massary (1914); Portrait of Mme Ladureau (1933) Château-Thierry (Town Hall): The Park (1901, in collaboration with Aubert) Cincinnati (AM): Merry Woman (La Rieuse) (engraving) Cleveland (MA): Meditation (1891) Dijon (MBA): Merry Woman (c. 1897, lithograph); Hair (c. 1898, lithograph); Reverie (c. 1898, pastel); Woman with Glove (1902, pastel); Head of a Woman in a White Hat (1902, pastel); Portrait of a Woman, Mme Ernest Chausson (1902); Line Aman-Jean Dressed as Marie-Antoinette (1903); Still-life (c. 1905); Little Girl in the Meadows Douai: Privacy, Reading (1904); Goodbye to the Swallows (1923); Resting after the Duet (1924); Raining Stars (c. 1925) Gray: Young Woman with Yellow Scarf (1895); Woman with White Glove (1898, pastel); La Pierreuse (1898, pastel); Study of a Woman (c. 1905, charcoal, pastel and distemper); Young Girl with Flowers (c. 1905); Study of a Reclining Nude (c. 1905, charcoal, chalk and watercolour); Woman in a Straw Hat (c. 1905, pastel); Nude with a Hat (1906, charcoal and pastel); Portrait of Mr Edmond Pigalle (1906, charcoal and pastel); Nude with Pergola (1906-1907, charcoal and pastel); Portrait of a Woman, Mme René-Jean (1907, charcoal and pastel); Young Woman with Blue Eyes (1920) Kurashiki (Ohara MA): Hair (c. 1910); Family Portrait (1913) Limoux (Mus. Petiet): Young Girl with Dog...

Category

1910s Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Jeune Fille avec Perroquet
Jeune Fille avec Perroquet

Jeune Fille avec Perroquet

By Edmond Aman-Jean

Located in Marlow, Buckinghamshire

Oil on canvas. Signed upper left. Framed dimensions are 31 inches high by 27 inches wide. Edmond Aman-Jean spent his early childhood in St-Amand, where his father ran an inland water transport company. Both his parents died before he was ten years old, and he went to live with his uncle in Paris. After a classical education at a Jesuit school, he started working at the studio of the sculptor Justin Lequien, where George Seurat was a fellow pupil. In 1878, with Seurat, he enrolled at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, studying under Henri Lehmann, who also taught Pissarro. There, Aman-Jean, Ernest Laurent and Seurat realised they had a shared interest in Impressionism and consequently decided to leave the school. The pencil portrait of Aman-Jean by Seurat is a moving testimony to the intensity of his early years. At the Salon of 1881 he discovered Puvis de Chavannes, and from around 1883 he worked with him, assisting on Sacred Grove, which adorns a wall of the main staircase of the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Lyons. He won his first award at the Salon in 1883, and in 1885 he was given a travel scholarship to Rome, where he went with Ernest Laurent and Henri Martin. After joining Stéphane Mallarmé's Cercle des Mardis, he was asked to participate in the Salon de la Rose-Croix in 1892 and 1893. It was around this time that he struck up a friendship with Verlaine that was to endure until his death. He stopped exhibiting at the Salon des Artistes Français, which he considered too conventional, and began exhibiting regularly at the Salon de la Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, becoming a member in 1893, and chairman of the painting section in 1914, 1921 and 1922. From 1896 to 1897 he went on a long trip to Italy with his wife, staying in Naples and Amalfi. In 1889 he won a silver medal, and in 1900 was awarded a gold medal at the Exposition Universelle. On that occasion he was also made a Chevalier of the Légion d'Honneur (he was later made an Officier, then in 1933 a Commandeur, as well as an Officier de l'Ordre de Léopold de Belgique). From 1899 onwards he often exhibited with the Société des Pastellistes de France. In 1899 he founded the Société Nouvelle de Peintres et Sculpteurs, which exhibited at the Galerie Georges Petit for 14 years. Around the turn of the century he travelled to Munich, Holland, Belgium and England and to Vienna as a guest of the Secession. He also made many trips to Italy. From 1902 onwards he was frequently invited to the USA to produce commissioned portraits of numerous public figures, as well as murals in a number of towns. He was also invited to exhibit there, notably at the Carnegie International in Pittsburgh until 1914, where he was on the judging panel. He even organised an exhibition of French art between 1911 and 1912 which took place in Buffalo, St Louis and Pittsburgh. In 1912 he took part in the new Salon de la Triennale with, among others, Maurice Denis and Renoir. In 1913 he was appointed curator of the La Fontaine museum in Château-Thierry. Also in 1913 he published his paper on Velazquez, which was an immediate success. His work was interrupted by World War I. For four years he stayed in Château-Thierry, which fell under German occupation, and almost ceased painting altogether. After 1922 he left the Société Nationale and founded the Salon des Tuileries together with Albert Besnard, who became its chairman, with Aman-Jean and Bourdelle as vice-chairmen. He very rarely had solo exhibitions, but exhibited jointly with René Ménard at the Galerie Georges Petit in 1925. In 1936 a major exhibition was held at the Salon des Tuileries in his honour. Since his death he has been represented at collective exhibitions of the works of his era. The Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris held a retrospective of his work in 1970; the Musée de la Chartreuse in Douai and the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Carcassonne hosted the exhibition Dreams of Women, Edmond Aman-Jean in 2003 and 2004. In the 1880s he had produced engravings and lithographs. His lithographs were a big success. He made little effort to distribute his etchings. He was a careful draughtsman, working in charcoal, lithographic pencil, coloured chalk and pastels. He produced decorative compositions, most of them destined for various public buildings in Paris: St Julian the Nurse in 1883, Joan of Arc in 1885, The Park in 1901 for the town hall in Château-Thierry, four panels for the Marsan wing of the Louvre in 1908-1909, and painted The Four Elements for the chemistry lecture theatre at the Sorbonne in 1912, after which the parliament of Chile commissioned four large panels for the parliamentary palace. For a while after his studies at the École des Beaux-Arts, Aman-Jean practised Seurat's technique of divisionism, but he soon reverted to a 'flat' style as he tackled his first few commissions for decorative compositions. During his stay in Naples and Amalfi in 1896 and 1897, the harsher light enabled him to discover more vibrant colours, and he took to using these in moderation during this first period of maturity. Gradually from 1912 onwards his work began to reflect a sensitivity to the intimate charm of Bonnard's work. Today, this intimist part of his output is more appreciated, although it surprised those around him at the time. Works include portraits of women at home: Portrait of Miss S. Poncet, Portrait of Mrs. Juliette Second, and some anonymous young women with dreamy, melancholy demeanours: Confiding Secrets, Waiting and Woman with a Peacock, in which we witness both the supple rigour of his drawing and the colour harmonies, muted again but punctuated with brighter notes, which especially characterise his later work. The critic Roger Marx thought, with respect to these young women, that 'the unfathomable mystery of the eyes and the vague smile suggest the flight of troubled thought', although it is true that art criticism leaned towards psychological explanation at the time. He also depicted numerous nudes, no longer portrayed as allegories, but displaying a healthy sensuality, particularly in his drawings from 1906-1907 onwards, which testify clearly to his interest in femininity. Museum and Gallery Holdings: Aix-les-Bains (Mus. Faure): Woman with a Black Hat (1900); Woman with a Pink Shawl (c. 1905, pastel); Reverie, Nude Study (c. 1907, charcoal and watercolour); Woman in a Dressing Gown (c. 1915, pastel); Bather with Rose (c. 1925) Amsterdam (Van Gogh Mus.): Pensive Young Woman, Portrait of Thadée Aman-Jean (1892) Brest: St Genevieve outside Paris (1885) Bucharest: Confiding Secrets (1908) Buenos Aires: Woman with Blue Vase Carcassonne: St Julian L'Hospitalier (1882); Doubter (1900) Château-Thierry: The Violinist (c. 1905, pastel); Woman with a Coral Necklace, Miss Ella Carmichael (c. 1908); Portrait of Dr. Ernest de Massary (1914); Portrait of Mme Ladureau (1933) Château-Thierry (Town Hall): The Park (1901, in collaboration with Aubert) Cincinnati (AM): Merry Woman (La Rieuse) (engraving) Cleveland (MA): Meditation (1891) Dijon (MBA): Merry Woman (c. 1897, lithograph); Hair (c. 1898, lithograph); Reverie (c. 1898, pastel); Woman with Glove (1902, pastel); Head of a Woman in a White Hat (1902, pastel); Portrait of a Woman, Mme Ernest Chausson (1902); Line Aman-Jean Dressed as Marie-Antoinette (1903); Still-life (c. 1905); Little Girl in the Meadows Douai: Privacy, Reading (1904); Goodbye to the Swallows (1923); Resting after the Duet (1924); Raining Stars (c. 1925) Gray: Young Woman with Yellow Scarf (1895); Woman with White Glove (1898, pastel); La Pierreuse (1898, pastel); Study of a Woman (c. 1905, charcoal, pastel and distemper); Young Girl with Flowers (c. 1905); Study of a Reclining Nude (c. 1905, charcoal, chalk and watercolour); Woman in a Straw Hat (c. 1905, pastel); Nude with a Hat (1906, charcoal and pastel); Portrait of Mr Edmond Pigalle (1906, charcoal and pastel); Nude with Pergola (1906-1907, charcoal and pastel); Portrait of a Woman, Mme René-Jean (1907, charcoal and pastel); Young Woman with Blue Eyes (1920) Kurashiki (Ohara MA): Hair (c. 1910); Family Portrait (1913) Limoux (Mus. Petiet): Young Girl with Dog...

Category

Early 20th Century Impressionist Edmond Aman-Jean Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Edmond Aman-jean paintings for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Edmond Aman-Jean paintings available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Edmond Aman-Jean in canvas, fabric, oil paint and more. Not every interior allows for large Edmond Aman-Jean paintings, so small editions measuring 35 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Marguerite Blasingame, Shay Kun, and Gail Potocki. Edmond Aman-Jean paintings prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $8,209 and tops out at $8,209, while the average work can sell for $8,209.