Snail Woman Jungle Fantasy - Haitian Master like Henri Rousseau
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Description
A part woman and part snail, a nude young black woman on all fours has a sizeable yellow snail's shell emerging from her back. She inches through a dense, verdant forest abundant with sweet-smelling flowers as she gazes toward the viewer. She seems perfect at home as she integrates into her lush environment. The work is reminiscent French naïve painter Henri Rousseau. Signed and dated lower right. Framed in a Heydenryk frame. Framed size Frame: 27.25" h x 31.5" w -
Salnave Philippe-Auguste (1908 - 1989) was a Haitian painter, lawyer, and magistrate known for his jungle scenes.[1]
Philippe-Auguste's work was included in the travelling exhibition, "Haitian Art," organized by the Brooklyn Museum in 1978, which traveled to the Milwaukee Art Center (now the Milwaukee Art Museum), and the New Orleans Museum of Art. It was also included posthumously in 2020 in New York in “Saving Grace: A Celebration of Haitian Art” and covered in the New York Times.[2] Philippe-Auguste was also the subject of a 2002 Danish documentary Drømmere (Dreamers).
Early life and career
Salnave Philippe-Auguste was born in 1908 in Saint-Marc, Haiti. He was a self-taught lawyer and magistrate who wrote articles and poetry before he took up painting.
Career
Philippe-Auguste embarked upon painting at 52 partly to support his children and joined the Centre d’Art in Port-au-Prince in December 1960. His jungle scenes reminiscent of the style of French artist Henri Rousseau sold well. Philippe-Auguste also painted in the same style, other scenes from nature, still lifes, fantastical creatures, carnivals, and human figures, especially women,posed against backgrounds of stylized flora and/or fauna.
Philippe-Auguste's work was included in the traveling exhibition, "Haitian Art," organized by the Brooklyn Museum in 1978, which traveled to the Milwaukee Art Center and the New Orleans Museum of Art. His painting Flamingoes was used to advertise it at the Brooklyn Museum.
Technique
Philippe-Auguste made preparatory drawings on tracing paper which he transferred to Masonite for his paintings. He also combined and re-used the drawings.
Collections
Philippe-Auguste's work is in the Ben and Beatrice Goldstein Foundation, the Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University, and the Huntington Museum of Art in West Virginia among others. A copy of his Flamingos poster for the 1978 Haitian art exhibit is in the collections of the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.
Documentary
He was the subject of a 2002 Danish documentary about Haitian painters Drømmere (Dreamers).
Personal life
Philippe-Auguste was married and had seven children.He died in Port-au-Prince on June 2, 1989. Wikipedia -
More Information
Documentation: Signed Origin: Haiti Period: 1950-1979 Materials: Oil on Board Condition: Good. Very good Creation Date: 1979 Styles / Movements: Conceptualism, Surrealism, Outsider Art Incollect Reference #: 783097 -
Dimensions
W. 24.75 in; H. 20.5 in; W. 62.87 cm; H. 52.07 cm;
Message from Seller:
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