The images and information presented below are for the instruction of students and scholarly research.
Henri Manguin
(1874-1949)
By Author
Think that you may own a painting by Henri Manguin? We authenticate, appraise, research and issue certificates of authenticity (COA) and provide consultations for all paintings by Henri Manguin.
Bathers
Henri Manguin was a
French painter and is perhaps one of the most famous of
all the Fauve painters. Born in Paris, Manguin attended
the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and studied under Gustave
Moreau. As a student, he spent his days studying works
at the Louvre and became close friends with Camoin and
Matisse.
Yellow Peaches on a Plate, 1926
Le Modele
Though best known as a
Fauve painter, Manguin was inspired early on by
Impressionism. Manguin married a woman named Jeanne in
1899 that he often used as a model for his paintings. He
had his first exhibition in 1900 at the Berthe Weil
Gallery, and then at the Salon des Independents in 1902.
His work is often compared to that of Matisse, and in
the grand scheme of Fauvism, his compositions are far
more peaceful and less intense than those of his
contemporaries.
Woman Resting, 1927
Jeanne Resting at Villa Dermiere, 1905
In 1904, Manguin
traveled to Saint-Tropez where he met fellow painter
Paul Signac. While he studied Pointillism and the
theories of Divisionism with Signac, he only briefly
used them in his own compositions. However, the
Mediterranean lighting in Saint-Tropez helped to
influence Manguin, and he would create a number of
landscapes with this soft mid-day light.
Pines at Cavalliere, 1906
Morning
Manguin did not
restrict himself to any certain genre of painting, and
created landscapes, interiors, still life, portraits and
figure studies equally. He generally signed his
paintings "Manguin" in neat cursive on the front of his
canvases. Manguin also did not limit himself to one
specific color palate, using color as he saw fit for
each of his compositions. Sometimes his use of color was
bright and intense, like his friend Matisse and the
Fauves would use, and at other times, more subtle, a
hint to his first love of Impressionism.
Vase D'Oeillets a la Nappe Jaune, 1924
Nude
Study For a Niad, 1906
Throughout his life,
Manguin continued to travel all over France, spending
his summers and winters in different corners of the
country with different artists. Toulon, Avignon, Gien,
Hornfluer, Saint-Malo and a number of other French
cities served as backdrops for the artist during his
fairly prolific career. During his lifetime, Manguin
continued to expose extensively, right up until his
death in France and abroad in London, Geneva and
elsewhere. It is said that after one of his unsuccessful
1938 exposures, Manguin destroyed at least 8 of his
paintings, so there is no telling what else may have
become of a number of his works.
Dans Les Arbres Villecroz
Today, Manguin's
paintings are housed in private and public collections
worldwide and perhaps in your own home. Still wondering
about a Fauvist painting hanging in your home? Contact us... it could be by Henri Manguin.