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Olivier Herdies – Modernist and Avant-Gardist


Olivier Herdies was born in Brussels, Belgium, in 1906 and studied at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Brussels, also undertaking study trips across several countries in Europe. During his travels, Herdies visited and became intrigued by Scandinavia. In 1937, he came to Stockholm to do a feature piece and grew increasingly fond of the city. He decided to stay in Sweden, supporting himself as a writer and French teacher. It was during one of his French courses that he met his future wife, Gudrun Huss. They married in 1947 and had two children.

Herdies initially worked as a poet but later began to draw and paint in an “informal” style – that is, abstract without being geometric – inspired by artists such as Klee, Pollock, Miró, and Michaux. This style is sometimes also referred to as “spontanism”, even though most so-called “spontanists” actually constructed their images as meticulously and carefully as any other painters. But Herdies truly did work spontaneously – quickly and directly, at times almost calligraphically, culminating in explosive and vegetative worlds.

Herdies only began painting at the age of forty-two, and like many artists who start late, he cut straight to the essentials. His works are direct and open. It is as if all the impressions and influences he had absorbed over many years finally found expression in his own artistic creation. Read more

 
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Important Winter Sale 669

475. A semi-antique pictoral Kashan rug, Central Persia, c. 206 x 138 cm.
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