Exhibition catalog of the Annonciade Museum of Saint Tropez
Henri-Edmond Cross in the light of the Var: the most beautiful country in the world.
Gourcuff Gradenigo / Annonciade Museum Saint Tropez
Regular price
€24,00
| N° d'inventaire | 29541 |
| Format | 20 x 25 |
| Détails | 176 p., illustrated, paperback. |
| Publication | Paris, 2023 |
| Etat | Nine |
| ISBN | 9782353403851 |
A pointillist and then a divisionist, Cross was part, along with Signac and Seurat, of the neo-impressionist movement.
Henri Edmond Joseph Delacroix (Douai, 1855-Le Lavandou, 1910) was born in Douai, where his family ran a hardware store. He apprenticed in Lille with Carolus-Duran and Alphonse Colas and made his debut at the 1881 Salon by translating his surname "Delacroix" into English "Cross", to distinguish himself from Eugène Delacroix, based on an idea from his friend the painter François Bonvin.
Initially a naturalist, Henri-Edmond Cross became friends with the Neo-Impressionist painters, whose anarchist beliefs he shared. He became friends with Charles Angrand, Maximilien Luce, and Théo van Rysselberghe.
Henri Edmond Joseph Delacroix (Douai, 1855-Le Lavandou, 1910) was born in Douai, where his family ran a hardware store. He apprenticed in Lille with Carolus-Duran and Alphonse Colas and made his debut at the 1881 Salon by translating his surname "Delacroix" into English "Cross", to distinguish himself from Eugène Delacroix, based on an idea from his friend the painter François Bonvin.
Initially a naturalist, Henri-Edmond Cross became friends with the Neo-Impressionist painters, whose anarchist beliefs he shared. He became friends with Charles Angrand, Maximilien Luce, and Théo van Rysselberghe.
Henri Edmond Joseph Delacroix (Douai, 1855-Le Lavandou, 1910) was born in Douai, where his family ran a hardware store. He apprenticed in Lille with Carolus-Duran and Alphonse Colas and made his debut at the 1881 Salon by translating his surname "Delacroix" into English "Cross", to distinguish himself from Eugène Delacroix, based on an idea from his friend the painter François Bonvin.
Initially a naturalist, Henri-Edmond Cross became friends with the Neo-Impressionist painters, whose anarchist beliefs he shared. He became friends with Charles Angrand, Maximilien Luce, and Théo van Rysselberghe.