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Henri Edmond Cross
(1856-1910)
Henri Edmond Cross was born in Douai in
Northern France and grew up in Lille. He had a British
Mother and a French Father. He was encouraged by his
Father’s cousin to paint, and he studied at the Ecole
des Beaux Arts. He also studied in Paris with the artist
Emile Dupont-Zipcy. Henri’s name at birth was Henri
Delacroix, and to avoid being confused with the painter
Eugene Delacroix, he adopted the English surname of
Cross.
In the Champs
Elysees, 1890
Mme. Hector France, nee Irma Clare and Later, Mme. Henri
Edmond Cross, 1891
Portrait of Madame Cross, 1901
La Siesta au Bord de la Mer, 1903
His early works were
portraits. He used dark colours and he painted in the
realist style. However, this was to all change with a
meeting with Claude Monet in 1883. After meeting Monet,
he began to change the colours that he used and was also
to change his style.
He was one of the founders of the Salon des Independants
in 1884. It was there that he met Paul Signac, and
together with him became one of the leading exponents of
Neo Impressionism or Pointillism as it is sometimes
known. In 1891, he moved to Saint Clair in the South of
France, near St. Tropez. Paul Signac was also to move to
Saint Clair in 1891. Henri Cross stayed in Saint Clair
for the rest of his life, but traveled annually to Paris
for the Salons.
Ponte Son Trovaso, 1902-1908
It was in the 1890s,
that Cross was to paint and develop his Neo
Impressionist style. In this period he concentrated
mostly on Seascapes and scenes of peasants at work. Like
other members of the Neo Impressionist group, he had
utopian and anarchist leanings. He contributed
illustrations to the anarchist publication, ‘The
Wanderer’. His famous painting, ‘Air of the Evening’,
which hangs in the Musee d’Orsay is said to reflect his
anarchist sentiments. Another example of a painting
which was produced in the style of Neo Impressionism is,
‘Evening Breeze,’ which also hangs in the Musee d’Orsay.
His artistic output was hampered throughout his life by
continual health problems, such as serious bouts of
arthritis, and eye problems. His paintings can be found
in museums all over the world, such as the Metropolitan
Museum of Art in New York and the Hermitage Museum in St
Petersburg.
Landscape with Stars, 1905-1908
The Shipwreck, 1906-1907
Paysage du Midi
Other Neo
Impressionists of the day include, Albert-Dubois Pillet,
Louis Hayet and Leo Gausson. Leo Gausson, in particular,
was an interesting character. Gausson initially studied
engraving in Paris. In the mid 1870s, he entered the
print shop of Eugene Froment. It was here that he met
Maximilien Luce, with Luce he experimented with colour
theories and became one of the exponents of Neo
Impressionism. He also produced wood carvings.
However, in 1896, Gausson abandoned painting to
concentrate on poetry. He published an anthology of
verse, as well as illustrating poetry books by other
poets. He spent the years between 1901, and 1908, in
Africa where he was a Colonial Administrator.
Albert-Dubois Pillet was another Neo Impressionist who
had several different careers, as well as being an
artist, he was an Officer in the French army, where he
fought in the Franco Prussian War. He was captured by
the German army and was held prisoner. When released, he
took up a career as an artist and began painting in the
Neo Impressionist style and was also one of the founders
of the Salon des Independants in Paris.