About this artwork
This drawing may have been completed at Saint-Idesbald or at least seems to have been inspired by this location. Saint-Idesbald is a Belgian coastal village close to the French border. After a number of visits during the 1940s, Delvaux acquired a studio there. The definition of shapes with short dashes is a typical of Delvaux’s ink and wash drawings of this period. The heavy-limbed, pensive woman in the foreground is a familiar physical type in Delvaux’s work and may reflect the influence on him of the monumental neoclassical figures that Picasso and de Chirico painted in the 1920s.
Updated before 2020
see media-
artist:Paul DelvauxBelgian (1897 - 1994)
-
title:Untitled (Woman by the Sea)
-
date created:1947
-
materials:Pen and ink and ink wash on paper
-
measurements:20.60 x 26.70 cm
-
object type:
-
credit line:Bequeathed by Gabrielle Keiller 1995
-
accession number:GMA 3963
-
gallery:
-
subject:
Paul Delvaux
Paul Delvaux
The Belgian artist Delvaux studied architecture and painting in Brussels. He experimented with painting in an expressionist style but turned to Surrealism after seeing a surrealist exhibition in 1934. Delvaux was not a formal member of the surrealist movement and did not participate in group...