Jean-Claude Fourneau Explained

Jean-Claude Fourneau
Birth Date:28 March 1907
Birth Place:Paris
Death Place:Paris
Nationality:French
Known For:Painting, drawing
Movement:Surrealism
Notable Works:Portraits of:
Felix Yusupov,
Général Catroux,
Jean Paulhan,
Dominique Aury,
Anne-Aymone Giscard d'Estaing,
etc.
Website:jcfourneau.com

Jean-Claude Fourneau (28 March 1907 – 9 October 1981) was a French painter, who was close to the surrealist movement.

He played the role of Bishop Cauchon in Robert Bresson's film The Trial of Joan of Arc (1962).

Biography

His mother was a descendant of, restorer of the Collège Sainte-Barbe in Paris; of Juliette Adam, founder of a French paper, La Nouvelle Revue, and muse of Léon Gambetta and the spiritual mother of Pierre Loti. She was the daughter of Paul Segond, pioneer in the field of surgical gynaecology.

His father, Ernest Fourneau, was the founder of French medicinal chemistry.

Jean-Claude Fourneau was a painter influenced by both classicism and surrealism.[1] He was first noticed by André Salmon at Fourneau's show at the Jeanne Castel Gallery in 1932.[2] He continued exhibiting there until 1948.

Claude Roger-Marx compared his drawings to those of a medium and appreciated their meticulousness: "The detail in Jean-Claude Fourneau's drawings gives us a sense of the infinite (...) Fascinating in the power and sensitivity that every stroke of his brush conveys."[3] For the literary character of his work, the critic quoted the artist himself: "I cannot conceive of a man painting who has no culture. I do not distinguish between painting and poetry, they both strive towards the same goal."[4]

Fourneau soon specialised in portraiture[5] and built himself a solid reputation. Oriane de La Panouse, the countess of Paris, the Harcourt, Brantes, Faucigny-Lucinge, Seillière, Broglie, Pourtalès, Maillé, Montesquiou, Wendel families were amongst his clients.

An intimate circle of people supported his work, leading François Pluchart to state in the review Combat during the André Weil Gallery show in 1963: "The Parisian fashion and intellectual circle has found its painter".[6] During 1961, he took the role of Bishop Cauchon in Robert Bresson's film The Trial of Joan of Arc (1962).[7]

A show in Casablanca in 1954 made him known in Morocco, where he lived for several years. He painted the portraits of Lalla Malika, the sister of King Hassan II, of Lalla Lamia, his step sister, of Karim Lamrani, his prime minister, of General Oufkir, and other members of the Moroccan Royal Court.Claude Rivière stated that Fourneau was the opposite of being a fashionable painter: "A great admirer of Antonin Artaud, of Paulhan, and of Aragon, the artist, with a fervour born of all the existential interstices due to his being, will first and foremost clash with his model. He dispossesses him of his own myths so that they may be recreated in the dimensions he wants to affirm."[8] Jean Paulhan asked: "By what means (or what secret) is it given to J.-C. Fourneau to have at his disposal both such abundance and such harshness?"[9]

Fourneau appeared in a photograph of surrealist artists gathered at the Café Cyrano in 1953,[10] and André Breton mentioned him as being part of the group.[11] Breton was a form of tutor to Fourneau, for whom he had much affection and confirmed the influence of surrealism in its literary and artistic form in his work.

On his return to Paris in 1968, Jean-Claude Fourneau resumed portrait painting, and his last exhibition was held in 1976.

Work

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Exhibitions with others

External links

Notes and References

  1. André Breton, "Flair - Chronologie du surréalisme 1916 – 1953", vignette 120 ; "Letters to Marcel Duchamp", vignette 10 .
  2. André Salmon, Gringoire, June 1932: ""We should expect much from the painter Jean-Claude Fourneau, a true young artist, who has just had a remarkable exhibition at Jeanne Castel. Fourneau is part of what was called, 15 years ago, "organised naturalism". However, his lyricism is new and personal. His works emanate a radiant voluptuousness that must remain the essential power of this artist, when he reaches the period of constructive anxieties."
  3. Claude Roger-Marx, "Jean-Claude Fourneau" Arts et métiers graphiques, n° 35, May 1933.
  4. Claude Roger-Marx, ibid.
  5. "Another ex-surrealist in the hot seat: Jean-Claude Fourneau. Here the tone becomes worldly and polite. The son of a great pharmaceutical dynasty, when he joined the so poorly judged group of the poètes maudits before the war, probably did not imagine that his experience would lead him to these portraits of princesses, countesses, marquises of the whole of Paris, beautiful and anxious in their deserted corridors, in search of a soul, a need, a dream. Jean-Claude Fourneau succeeds Christian Bérard with his own style. It was not easy and it is successful." Jean Bouret, "7 jours avec la peinture", Les Lettres françaises, n° 1003, 14 Nov. 1963.
  6. François Pluchart, "Le Tout-Paris a trouvé son peintre : Fourneau" Combat, 6 Nov. 1963.
  7. Web site: Procès de Jeanne d'Arc . Films de France . August 8, 2015.
  8. Claude Rivière, "Jean-Claude Fourneau peintre de la vie modern", Combat, 14 Nov. 1963.
  9. "L'actualité artistique", Le Figaro littéraire, 14 Nov. 1963.
  10. André Breton 42, Rue Fontaine, catalogue of the Calmels Cohen sale, Hôtel Drouot, April 2003, p. 193.
  11. Ibid. On the back of this photograph, as the legend of the catalogue mentions, Breton wrote the names of the group members, among which is that of J.-C. Fourneau.
  12. Sister of Ernest-Antoine Seillière.
  13. Daughter of Pierre Laval and wife of René de Chambrun.
  14. Servant of Marcel Proust.
  15. Member of Conseil d'administration du musée d'Orsay, Member of Conseil d'administration de la Société des amis du Louvre, former manager of Christie's-Europe, donor to French Musées nationaux.
  16. Cf. Bulletin de la Société des lecteurs de Jean Paulhan, n° 30, Oct. 2007, p. 17.