Marcel Dyf (French, 1899-1985

Selasa, 12 November 2013



























Marcel Dyf  (French, 1899-1985)
Marcel Dyf (French, October 7, 1899–September 15, 1985) was a French painter best known for his work in the Impressionist movement. Though he started to paint in his younger years, Dyf did not begin to focus on art until 1922, when he moved to Arles, France. In 1935, he moved to Paris, France, and acquired a studio once used by Maximilien Luce (French, 1858–1941). Dyf only worked there for a few years before he joined the French Resistance during World War II.

In 1949, Dyf opened a studio in Saint Paul-de-Vence in Provence, France. The following year, he opened a second studio in Cannes, France, and studied at the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh, PA. Though his early work often showed landscapes, he decided to start working on portraits. After Dyf married his wife, Claudine, he asked her to pose for him, and many of his portrait paintings showed Claudine in various poses, including Portrait d'une Femme, Portrait de la Femme a la Robe Bleu, and Le Souper Solitaire. The artist’s first show came in 1949 at the House of Petrides in Paris, France. The gallery exhibited his work again in 1951 and 1953.

Some of Dyf’s later paintings used landscape images in new ways. He frequently added new colors, texture, and fluid lines that gave the paintings a surreal quality. Le port de La Rochelle and Sur la manche are among the more famous landscapes he did in his later years. During the 1960s and 1970s, Dyf began to exhibit his work in London, Canada, and the United States. Frost and Reed in London, UK, exhibited his work in 1955, 1987, and 1990. The Musee Arlaten in Arles, France, and the Smith College Museum of Art in Northampton, MA, have the artist’s work as part of their permanent collections. Dyf also did murals for the Collège Ampère in Lyons, France, the Saint Martin-de-Crau Town Hall in Saint Martin-de-Crau, France, and Les Saintes Maries-de-la-Mer Town Hall in Camargue, France. Though he also lived in Bretagne, France, and Bois d'Arcy, France, the artist eventually settled in Paris, where he lived until his death in 1985

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