128 cm

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  • Soleil rouge (Red sun)

     
    Aubusson tapestry woven in the  Legoueix workshop. With signed label, n°1/6. Circa 1980.
       
    It was in 1953 that Jean Picart le Doux proposed to Chaye to become his assistant and encouraged him to design tapestry cartoons : he would produce numerous bucolic cartoons, but also views of Normandy (Mont Saint Michel, Honfleur, regattas,…) whence he came. A design which brings together two leitmotivs characteristic of Simon Chaye, a bouquet and a flock of birds, which here detach themselves from a background formed by the red sun.
  • Paysage (landscape)

        Aubusson tapestry woven by the Legoueix workshop. N°4/6. Circa 1970.            
  • Le village d'Eze (the village of Eze)

       
    Aubusson tapestry woven by the Jean Laurent workshop. N°3/6. Circa 1980.
        In a decorative post-cubist style redolent of Toffoli, Raymond Poulet here interprets one of the most spectacular locations on the côte
     
  • Le secret (the secret)

      Tapestry woven by the Saint-Cyr workshop. With signed label, n°I/VI. Circa 1970.
            Having established himself in the 1930's in the region around Nantes, Morin worked as an artist in  advertising as well as painting and engraving, at first in a figurative style and then evolving towards abstraction from 1954 onwards. His interest in monumental art is revealed in his use of mosaic (particularly within the framework  of the government  1% subsidy for art in works produced for schools of the greater Nantes area) but also in tapestry.  As early as 1952 he received the first commissions for religious-themed works which would be produced by the Plasse le Caisne workshop (who also worked for Manessier, Le Moal...), before collaborating with Pierre Daquin's Atelier de Saint-Cyr, a major player in the French movement for la Nouvelle Tapisserie, and having several pieces exhibited at the Demeure gallery. From then onwards, until 1982, other designs would be produced by the workshops of the Ecole Regionale des Beaux-Arts in Angers, and later by the artist's own daughter who was herself a weaver.   In his collaboration with Daquin (as in the latter's own works) the medium became one with the message, the technical mastery was absolute : the surfaces are animated and vibrant with a complexity of different textures and stitches... and Morin's poetic designs with their delicately symetrical signs, found an ideal expression.
  • Portrait

     
    Aubusson tapestry woven by the Pinton workshop. With label, n°1/6. Circa 1980.
     
    Doubtless a tapestry woven from a work by Hélène Champaloux (with an X !), in a style reminiscent of posters of the 1970’s, featuring a face treated as if  by solarization : a very rare subject for a tapestry!

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