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Chaïm Soutine

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Chaïm Soutine
NameChaïm Soutine
CaptionPortrait by Amedeo Modigliani, c. 1916
Birth nameChaïm Soutine
Birth date13 January 1893
Birth placeSmilavichy, Minsk Governorate, Russian Empire
Death date09 August 1943
Death placeParis, France
NationalityRussian, later French
FieldPainting
TrainingVilnius Academy of Art, École des Beaux-Arts, Académie de la Grande Chaumière
MovementExpressionism, School of Paris
PatronsAlbert C. Barnes, Madeleine Castaing
Influenced byRembrandt, Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin, Vincent van Gogh
InfluencedWillem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, Francis Bacon

Chaïm Soutine. He was a French painter of Belarusian-Jewish origin, a key figure in the School of Paris whose intensely expressive works bridged Post-Impressionism and early Expressionism. Living and working primarily in the Montparnasse quarter of Paris, his turbulent life and visceral approach to painting, characterized by distorted forms and thick Impasto, made him a pivotal artist of the early 20th century. Despite chronic poverty and ill health, his work was championed by influential collectors like Albert C. Barnes and he left a profound legacy on post-war Abstract Expressionism.

Life and career

Born into a poor family in the Minsk Governorate, he faced adversity from an early age, with his artistic ambitions clashing with the strictures of his Shtetl community. After studying at the Vilnius Academy of Art, he arrived in Paris in 1913, quickly immersing himself in the vibrant artistic community of La Ruche in Montparnasse. There, he formed close friendships with fellow artists including Amedeo Modigliani, who painted his portrait, and Marc Chagall. His early years were marked by severe poverty, but his fortunes changed dramatically in 1923 when the American collector Albert C. Barnes purchased a large number of his paintings following a studio visit arranged by the dealer Paul Guillaume. This allowed him periods of work in the French Riviera and later, a productive stay at the estate of his patron Madeleine Castaing in Lèves. With the outbreak of World War II and the Nazi occupation of France, as a Jew, he was forced to flee Paris repeatedly, eventually dying from a perforated ulcer in 1943 after emergency surgery, evading capture by the Gestapo.

Artistic style and influences

Soutine’s style is defined by a raw, physical intensity, with agitated brushwork, swirling compositions, and a masterful, often unsettling use of color that pushed subjects toward abstraction. He was deeply influenced by the Old Masters he studied at the Louvre, particularly the psychological depth and chiaroscuro of Rembrandt and the intimate still lifes of Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin. The emotional force and painterly technique of Vincent van Gogh was another crucial touchstone. He worked directly from observed reality, often in a state of great agitation, famously requiring multiple carcasses for his still life series to maintain a sense of fresh, bloody presence. This method resulted in a corporeal, almost violent transformation of his subjects—whether landscapes, portraits, or dead animals—into visions of turbulent, embodied emotion.

Major works and series

His oeuvre is organized into several powerful series, each exploring a single subject with obsessive variation. The most famous are his Carcass of Beef paintings, directly inspired by Rembrandt's Slaughtered Ox, where he depicted flayed bovine carcasses in radiant, visceral detail. His landscape series, such as the vertiginous views of Céret and the rolling hills near Chartres, are characterized by wildly undulating, almost anthropomorphic trees and houses. The portrait series includes distinctive depictions of uniformed attendants, such as bellboys and pastry cooks, imbued with a sense of psychological unease. Other notable individual works include Woman in Red (c. 1922) and the poignant The Little Pastry Cook (c. 1927), which showcase his unique approach to the human figure.

Legacy and impact

Although he shunned the spotlight and never aligned with a specific movement, Soutine’s impact on 20th-century art is immense. His work was a critical bridge for many Abstract Expressionists; both Willem de Kooning and Jackson Pollock admired his gestural freedom and emotional rawness, while Francis Bacon shared his fascination with the visceral and distorted body. Major retrospectives at institutions like the Museum of Modern Art in New York City and the Musée de l'Orangerie in Paris have cemented his reputation. His paintings command among the highest prices for a School of Paris artist, and his influence continues to be felt in contemporary figurative painting that prioritizes psychological intensity and material tactility over formal representation.

Category:French painters Category:School of Paris Category:Expressionist painters