Vincent Manago Explained

Vincent Manago
Birth Name:Vincent Manago
Birth Date:15 January 1880
Birth Place:Toulon, France
Death Date:30 June 1936
Death Place:Paris, France
Known For:Drawing and painting
Training:Académie Julian, Paris[1]
Movement:Orientalism
Notable Works:Woman Preparing Couscous, Le Marché à Saint Tropez, Place en Afrique du Nord
Patrons:Jean-Paul Laurens

Vincent Manago (1880–1936) was a French painter specialised on landscapes, marines and genre paintings of the Mediterranean coast (Port de Martigues, La Rochelle, Venice) of oriental style.

Biography and career

Vincent Manago was born April 4, 1878 in Toulon and died August 25, 1936 (aged 58) in Paris. He studied at the Academie Julian with Jean-Paul Laurens and was very popular in Marseille between 1900 and 1913 when he left for North Africa. He travelled and worked in Algiers and Tunis which showed in the vibrant colours and thick impasto of his paintings. As other Orientalist artists, he also used postcards as inspiration. One such postcard, Négresse pétrissant la Galette dans la Guessâa (Collections ND. Phot., Librairie d'Amico, Tunis) was used for his 1903 painting of a street scene of a young woman sorting through couscous in a clay bowl. At least four different versions of this painting were made, one of which is in the Musée des beaux-arts de Marseille.[2]

He also painted landscapes of Provence and the Mediterranean coast, including the port of Martigues and the city of Venice.

His work was shown at the Colonial exhibition of Marseille in 1922 and at the Paris Colonial Exposition in 1931.[3]

In addition to being a painter, Manago also worked as a decorator of several private residences in Tunis and Algiers.

His paintings can be found in France, at the Musée Baron Martin in Gray, the Musée Cantini, and the Musée des Beaux Arts in Marseille.

His oldest son Dominique Manago, born in Tunis in 1902, also became a painter and so did his youngest son Armand, born in Paris in 1913, who changed his artist name to A.M. Guérin. Vincent Manago lived in Paris until his death on 30 June 1936.[4] [5]

Selected paintings

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.askart.com/artist/Vincent%20Manago/11051547/Vincent%20Manago.aspx Askart
  2. L. Thornton, 1994. Women as portrait in orientalist painting. ACR Edition International, Paris. 192 p.
  3. https://www.askart.com/artist/Vincent_Manago/11051547/Vincent_Manago.aspx Askart
  4. E. Benezit, 1976. Dictionnaire critique et documentaire des peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs et graveurs. Volume 7, p. 128. Librairie Gründ. Paris, France. .
  5. http://oxfordindex.oup.com/view/10.1093/benz/9780199773787.article.B00115481?rskey=dvDHHN&result=1 Benezit Dictionary of Artists