Luc-Peter Crombé | |
Birth Date: | 14 January 1920 |
Birth Place: | Opwijk, Belgium |
Death Date: | 17 May 2005 (aged 85) |
Death Place: | Sint-Martens-Latem, Belgium |
Resting Place: | Deurle, Belgium |
Nationality: | Belgium (Flemish) |
Known For: | Religious work, tempera technique, female figures |
Movement: | 4th Latem School of Flemish Art |
Website: | Official website Luc-Peter Crombé |
Luc-Peter Crombé (14 January 1920 – 17 May 2005) was a Belgian, Flemish painter.
Luc-Peter Crombé was painter of landscapes, portraits, figures and religious subjects. He was part of the so-called 4th School of Latem of Flemish art and was known for his use of the tempera technique, his religious art but also for the wide variety of styles that he helped develop and explore.
Luc-Peter Crombé was born in Opwijk, a small Flemish city northwest of Brussels. He studied at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts and the Sint-Lucas Academie in Ghent, as well as at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Antwerp). He was a student of Jos Verdegem and Constant Permeke. Crombé studied art history in the École du Louvre in Paris and also spent time in the mid 1940s at the influential Académie de la Grande Chaumière where he learned how to draw the female body.
The earliest works by Luc-Peter Crombé are in a more intimate and decorative style, in which he relies on traditional images from every day Flemish life. From the 1950s onwards, the influences from the South became apparent, beginning with the use of tempera technique and in particular in the area of the interplay between colour and light. The figure also gets its place as the main motif (a child's world, portraits and background characters), pastel and charcoal drawings. At the end of the 1950s, his travels to Corsica where his art focus on the origin and erosion of rocks. He begins to experiment with abstract art. This period, which runs until around 1965, is therefore considered to be his first period with his Corsica series, Italy, Morocco and Spanish series.
The religious art of Luc-Peter Crombé in the late 1950s and early 1960s culminates with the painting of his famous Way of the Cross hangs in the Mariahal next to the Basilica of Our Lady of Scherpenheuvel.
At the end of the 1960s and early 1970s, Luc-Peter Crombé had two work-studios: in addition to the Sint-Martens-Latem studio, he also had another studio in Maaseik. The smooth brush strokes dominate from that moment. During this period, he mainly produces pastel and charcoal drawings. The Latem period is characterized by the following successive series:
In addition to the tempera technique, fresco was his favourite technique. Many subjects such as the lace workers, landscapes, animals and intimate subjects were developed using this technique.
In his final period, Luc-Peter Crombé would work through the drawings that had remained in the studio with very surprising results. The backgrounds are often reduced to a game of surfaces. The stark contrast of figuration and background gives the works a more sensitive touch. Colour contrasts seem to harmoniously mix with a common colouring. The continued prominence of the female figure begins to change, based on the premise that with sexual liberation, the woman first becomes more conscious of the ways one's gender identity and sexuality have been shaped by society and then intentionally constructing (and becoming free to express) one's authentic gender identity and sexuality.
He was awarded the following prizes:Prize for live model, 1947, AntwerpProvincial prize, 1954, East FlandersPrize for graphics, 1955, Frankfurt;Benevenuto prize, 1956, Milan;Sagrada family prize for religious art, 1957, Barcelona;Distinguished Award at World's Fair, 1964, New York;[1] New York city prize, 1964, New York;Honorary prize, 1965, Detroit;Culture Prize, Opwijk 2020 (post-humous)[2] [3]
Luc-Peter Crombé died in 2005 and is buried in Deurle alongside other well-known artists from Sint-Martens-Latem late 19th and 20th century artistic community such as Gustave De Smet, Léon De Smet, Xavier Decock, Jenny Montigny and Albert Claeys.