Georges Rohner

France  • 1913  - 2000

Presentation

Georges Rohner, who learned to draw alongside an uncle, interrupted his studies at the Lycée Janson in Sailly and successfully entered the Beaux-Arts in Paris. He draws from antiquity and admires at the Louvre the works of Uccelo, Mantegna, Chardin, Corot, Champaigne and particularly Georges de La Tour, David and Ingres whose “classical aesthetic resulting from the return to the antiquity advocated" by Winckelmann at the end of the 18th century" according to Lydia Harambourg. Among the moderns, only Mondrian holds his attention.

In 1930, Rohner was admitted to the Lucien Simon workshop where he met Humblot and Despierre with whom he established strong and lasting friendships: they were both admitted to the Academy of Fine Arts 40 years later. He made his debut at the Salon d'Automne where he exhibited regularly, then participated in the Salon des Indépendants and the Tuileries. His conviction that the salvation of painting requires a return to the subject was stimulated by the exhibitions The Painters of Reality in France in the 18th Century and The Le Nain which impressed him. In 1935, he joined the Forces Nouvelles group with Humblot, Jannot, Lasne, Pellan and Tel Coat. The group is placed under the patronage of David and Ingres. During his military service, he went to Guadeloupe where he decorated the Town Hall of Basse-Terre.

Rohner participated in the first Salon de la Nouvelle Génération then his first personal exhibition was organized in 1936. Mobilized, he was taken prisoner at Stala XII in Trier, where he decorated the chapel. Back in 1942, he moved to rue Bonaparte where his friend Despierre would later join him a few blocks away.

Having reached the maturity of his art, Rohner devotes his work to landscapes, portraits and still lifes. By renewing his vision of things, Rohner has, according to Lydia Harambourg, “created new subjects which owe nothing to history, to mythology. Having always refused abstraction, he draws from a concrete repertoire, real objects and beings which will appear refined, stripped of all cultural references and all allusions of a surrealist nature, in order to give this visible reality a greater intensity. »

Rohner exhibited at the Framond gallery from 1951 to 1953. Critics celebrated him, notably Pierre Descargues, Pierre du Colombier, Claude Roger-Marx and André Warnod. His exhibitions followed one another in the 1960s, among others at the Galerie de Paris. He exhibited at the Wildensteins in London in 1973 and in New York in 1974 before joining the Framond gallery definitively in 1983.

His works are kept in numerous museums: Center Pompidou, Museum of Modern Art in Paris, Angers, Brest, Caen, Beauvais, Menton, Nancy, Rodez, Rouen.


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All artworks of Georges Rohner
Painting, Orange sur nappe rouge et blanche, Georges Rohner

Orange sur nappe rouge et blanche

Georges Rohner

Painting - 50 x 61 x 2 cm Painting - 19.7 x 24 x 0.8 inch

$7,770

Painting, Verre renversé, Georges Rohner

Verre renversé

Georges Rohner

Painting - 65 x 93 x 3 cm Painting - 25.6 x 36.6 x 1.2 inch

$14,985

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When was Georges Rohner born?

The year of birth of the artist is: 1913