Paul Saïn

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Paul Saïn
Paul Saïn (2).jpg
Portrait of Paul Saïn, before 1900
Born5 December 1853
Avignon, France
Died6 March 1908
Avignon, France
Resting placeCemetery of Saint-Véran, Avignon
NationalityFrench
EducationÉcole des Beaux-Arts d'Avignon
Known forPainter of landscapes and portraits
MovementOrientalist

Jean-Paul Marie Saïn (5 December 1853, Avignon - 6 March 1908, Avignon) was a French painter, known primarily for landscapes and portraits.

Biography[]

He studied at the " [fr]", where he received first prize for painting from live models and, in 1873, a prize for drawing from the Musée Calvet. These awards brought him a scholarship to study in Paris at the École des Beaux-Arts in the workshop of Jean-Léon Gérôme, where he remained until 1877. After that, he shared a studio with Paul Avril and several others.

Portrait of Frédéric Mistral by Paul Saïn

At the time, he mostly painted seascapes. His first exhibit at the Salon was in 1879, but he did not begin to show there on a regular basis until 1887. Later, together with his friend, Pierre Grivolas and his student,  [fr], he would visit the banks of the Rhône, near Avignon, and the village of Les Angles to paint en plein aire.

He became a frequent visitor to Saint-Céneri-le-Gérei, a picturesque village that attracted many painters, and would come to live there for twenty-five years. He made numerous portraits in nearby Moisy, at the local inn, and is believed to have created more than 1600 portraits altogether.

In 1887, he made an extended visit to Algeria and was named a Knight in the Legion of Honor in 1895.[1] Five years later, he was one of numerous artists chosen to provide decorations for the restaurant at the Gare de Lyon (now known as Le Train Bleu), where he painted scenes from Avignon.[2]

He is buried at the Cemetery of Saint-Véran in Avignon and his tomb is decorated with a bronze medallion by Félix Charpentier. A street near there has been named after him and, later, the city of Saint-Céneri-le-Gérei commissioned Christian Malézieux (born 1931), to do a bronze bust of him for the village's main street.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ Documentation @ the Base Léonore.
  2. ^ Louise Gaggini, et al., Le Train Bleu, éd. Presse Lois Unis Service, Paris, 1990 ISBN 2-908557-01-0
  3. ^ Picture of the bust (top row) @ Malézieux's website.

Further reading[]

  • Raphaël Merindol, La Saga des Saïn, Peintre, Sculpteur et Laqueur Provençaux, éditions Aubanel, 1989 ISBN 978-2-7006-0135-0

See also[]

External links[]

Media related to Paul Saïn at Wikimedia Commons

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