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Henri Lebasque at the crossroads of influences...

Henri Lebasque is the painter of his generation who will be closest to the Impressionists. Born in 1865, he first studied at the Beaux-Arts in Angers. In 1886, he went to Paris where he first frequented the studio of Léon Bonnat, grand master of academism and famous portrait painter of the time.

White Ships, 1908, watercolor over graphite, with gouache and wax resist, Brooklyn Museum
Henri Lebasque Un après-midi au parc.Cologne Wallraf-Richartz-Museum

Influenced by Camille Pissarro, he passionately admired Paul Cézanne as well as the banker Camondo's collection, of which he observed at length the Manets, Degas, Jongkind and Monet that Camondo would later bequeath to the Louvre.

Pêcheur majorquin, 1908, huile sur toile, Collection privée
Henri Lebasque Port de Saint Tropez. 1906. Musée de l'Annonciade. Saint Tropez

His painting, of Impressionist style until around 1905, then approaches Fauvism with a more frank color palette, a broader style. He assumes a good proximity with Maximilien Luce or Paul Signac.

Pierre Bonnard. La barge Saint Tropez dans le port de Cannes. 1926. National Art Gallery Washington D.C.
Pierre Bonnard. La barge Saint Tropez dans le port de Cannes. 1926. National Art Gallery Washington D.C.

His art is sometimes similar to that of Pierre Bonnard with its warm and luminous touches.

Henri Lebasque. Nu étendu. 1923. Musée Soumaya. Mexico.
Henri Lebasque. Nu étendu. 1923. Musée Soumaya. Mexico.
Pierre Bonnard. Femme nue sur le canapé. 1905. Collection privée
Pierre Bonnard. Femme nue sur le canapé. 1905. Collection privée

Guillaume Apollinaire, speaking of the 20th Salon national des Beaux-Arts, writes: "Henri Lebasque's exhibition, luminous and harmonious, must be placed above par... the sensitivity of the artist merges with the light which 'inspires him."

Henri Lebasque. Oliviers dans l'après-midi à Cannes 1916. The Athaeneum Art Center
Henri Lebasque. Oliviers dans l'après-midi à Cannes 1916. The Athaeneum Art Center
Vincent Van Gogh. Champs d'oliviers. 1889. Kröller-Müller Museum
Vincent Van Gogh. Champs d'oliviers. 1889. Kröller-Müller Museum

His painting of women resting among olive trees in Cannes, painted in 1916, is reminiscent of Vincent Van Gogh's canvas, painted 27 years earlier, in the use of deep green and blue tones. Serenity for Lebasque, turmoil for Vincent.


Henri Lebasque settled in Le Cannet, near Cannes, in 1924, where his life ended in 1937.


In his art history lectures, Fabrice Roy combines the past with the present, in a poetic and playful evocation of the French 19th century...



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