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Frits Van den Berghe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Belgian painter and illustrator (1883–1939)

Self-portrait (c.1933)

Frits Van den Berghe (3 April 1883 – 23 September 1939) was a Belgianexpressionist andsurrealistpainter andillustrator.

Biography

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Portrait of Stella van de Wiele (1915)

He was born inGhent, where his father was the Librarian at theUniversity of Ghent.[1] From 1898 to 1904, he studied at theRoyal Academy of Fine Arts underJean Delvin. In 1904, on the recommendation of his fellow painter, Alfons Dessenis (1874–1952), he went to stay at the art colony inSint-Martens-Latem. It was there he metAlbert Servaes,Gustave De Smet andConstant Permeke. Together, they established what came to be known as theLatem School of expressionist painting.[2] He also obtained what would prove to be the lifelong support of the journalist and art promoter,Paul-Gustave van Hecke.[1]

In 1907 he was married and, shortly after, became a professor at the Ghent Academy.[2] A few years later, his family life and artistic career were disturbed by a relationship with the actress Stella van de Wiele (1887–1954). In 1914, he gave up his position and spent six months in the United States.[1]

During World War I, Van den Berghe became a refugee in the Netherlands. He, Stella and De Smet toured the art colonies in Amsterdam,Blaricum andLaren, where he briefly taught.[2] His work also matured and came under the influence ofFreudian psychoanalysis. In 1922, after returning to Belgium, he lived with De Smet and Permeke inOstend. After that, he and De Smet moved about westernFlanders, seeking inspiration, and finally settled inAfsnee at a villa supplied by Van Hecke.[1]

Van den Berghe later spent some time in Brussels, but theGreat Depression virtually eliminated the market for any sort of modern art, so he returned to Ghent and became an illustrator for the Socialist newspaper,Vooruit [nl] (Forward).[1] He worked for them until his death. From 1937 to 1938, he drew the panels for a comic strip written byJean Ray.[2] During his later years, he painted in a surrealistic style, replete with dream visions and hallucinations. He died in Ghent on 23 September 1939.

Major retrospectives were held in 1962 (Brussels) and 1984 (Utrecht). On the sixtieth anniversary of his death, in 1999, a large exhibition was held in Ostend with, for the first time, his illustrations. His painting, "Zondag" (Sunday), was included in the German series1000 Meisterwerke and featured on a Belgian postage stamp in 2001.

Selected paintings

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References

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  1. ^abcdeBrief biography from theDictionnaire des peintres belges @ Belgian Art Links.
  2. ^abcdFrits Van den Berghe Life and Work - bgs artMedia, Dutch Portfolio.

Further reading

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  • Piet Boyens, Patrick Derom, Gilles Marquenie:Frits Van Den Berghe: Catalogue Raisonné, Exhibitions International, 2012ISBN 90-532-5136-7
  • Anne Marie Musschoot, Yves T'Sjoen, Joost De Geest:Frits Van den Berghe en Richard Minne. Stripverhalen 1931–1935, Snoeck-Ducaju & Zoon, 1996ISBN 90-506-6167-X
  • Emile Langui, Frits Van den Berghe 1883–1939. De mens en zijn werk, Mercatorfonds, Antwerp, 1968
  • Paul-Gustave Van Hecke,Frits Van den Berghe, Volume 9 of "Monographies de l'art belge: Série 2", De Sikkel, 1950

See also

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Robert Aerens

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toFrits Van den Berghe.
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