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2007-10-06 09:43:34 · 3 answers · asked by Innovator 2 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Painting

3 answers

Hi! He is very well documented if you need to search more. His work is considered of the primitive (naive) school. It seems there are two different birthdates but it looks like the same artist. DEMONCHY, André (1914-2003)
http://web.artprice.com/artistdetails.aspx?idArti=MTc2OTMxOTcxNDg4Njg=&src=3
http://www.askart.com/askart/d/andre_demonchy/andre_demonchy.aspx
http://www.galzim.de/1.html
Andre Demonchy (French, 1894) http://www.artnet.com/artist/647100/andre-demonchy.html
scroll artists on left: http://www.midan.fr/login.php?osCsid=c326ea1cf3dc2c93cbe4d3b229b4f2be
http://www.sibmas.org/idpac/europe/frl013.html#2 And it seems, if the translation is correct, that in 2005, Clint Eastwood bought one of his paintings at auction for one million dollars. http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_na%C3%AFf

2007-10-06 14:36:51 · answer #1 · answered by guess who at large 7 · 0 0

Andre Demonchy is a french naive artist (1914-2003 ). He is very well listed and his quotation does not stop raising, one of his artwork was sold over one million dollars in 2005 in L.A.
Andre Demonchy was born in Paris in 1914. He never went to school and following the death of both parents became a ward of the state at an early age. He worked on farms under difficult conditions until 1938 when he found a job with the railways as an office worker in Paris. He claims to have always drawn in his spare time. In 1944 he began to make watercolors which he sold to support his young family. In 1947 after receiving advise from collectors he tried oils for the first time and in 1948 he received his first exhibition in New York. In 1949 he had an exhibition in Paris and then became a regular in events showing naive art. His inspiration was initially the landscapes of Yonne, the region where he worked as a child. He always drew on personal experiences for the subjects of his paintings, such as county fairs, the railways and the towns and villages he loved. As he developed, his grasp of perspective grew particularly in the scenes of Paris and he delighted in putting as much detail as possible in his buildings and the walls. Demonchy is often considered to be in the first rank of French self-taught artists following such luminaries as Rousseau and Bauchant

2007-10-08 12:46:25 · answer #2 · answered by Jemin J 1 · 0 0

nope.

2007-10-06 16:51:55 · answer #3 · answered by krazykiddz 3 · 0 0

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