A wonderfully strong, life affirming Provence landscape by Hungarian-born Léopold Starkmann de Féltorony.
Starkmann was born in Budapest in either 1909 or 1914, according to different sources. His birth coincides with the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and in his youth, the young artist knew hunger, political unrest and upheavals.
He tried to emigrate to America, but was tragically refused. After a long and painful journey, he arrived in Paris, with a thirty-day visa in his pocket -which he would later call in his autobiography his ''visa for hope''.
And indeed, France fulfilled the artist''s hopes, and perhaps for this reason, Starkmann''s painting have a vigorous, unassailable quality - a bit like Provence itself. As we can see, the rugged landscape with its olive trees and white stone reflecting the heat suited him well.
Starkmann exhibited at the Parisian Galerie André Weil, with four one man shows between 1951 and 1957.
Spending time both in the French Capital and in Vallauris, the art'' colony in Provence, he exhibited at the Salon des Indépendents in 1960, and between 1950 and 1965 at Salons in the South of France. Paintings by Starkmann were acquired by the French State and the Musée d''Art Moderne in Paris. An oil from 1953 - the same year in which the painting presented here was created - is presently in the Chateau de Sceaux.
Signed and dated at the lower right, our oil on canvas measures 46 x 61 cm. The overall framed size in a luxurious frame is 60 x 75 cm.
Nous parlons français, und wir sprechen auch Deutsch! Paintings may be viewed in Norwich and in Paris, as well as in London and Cambridge by appointment. Please contact us if you would like further details and images of an artwork.
Antique Number: SA809077
Dateline of this antique is 1950
Height is 46cm (18.1inches)
Width is 61cm (24.0inches)
Depth is 1cm (0.4inches)
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