Ernest Faut | |
Birth Name: | Ernest Faut |
Birth Date: | 1879 1, df=y |
Birth Place: | Ghent, Belgium |
Death Place: | Leuven, Belgium |
Occupation: | Painter |
Education: | Academy of Brussels Academy of Leuven |
Ernest Faut (27 January 1879 – 17 October 1961)[1] [2] was a Flemish - Belgian painter.[3] He was a draftsman, painter and lithographer of decorative works, landscapes, interiors, psychological portraits, religious scenes, churches and beguinages.
Ernest Faut started his education at the Academy of Brussels with Constant Montald and also studied at the Academy of Leuven with Constantin Meunier. He was a professor for forty years (until 1944) at the Academy of Leuven, of which he later became director.[4]
Faut delivered technically very strong paintings, with a delicate and sensitive range of colors. Faut also used the chiaroscuro technique. In the 1930s, his work mainly featured symbolic scenes with a late after-effect of Art Nouveau influences. Some paintings are characterized by a hazy melancholy.
Faut's work is dispersed in several museums, including the M – Museum of Leuven.