

The subtlety of nuances gives rise to a myriad of sensations, reminiscent of great predecessors, particularly the landscape painter Auguste Pointelin.
Biography
Alex Claude (b. 1971) is a French contemporary painter known for his imaginary abstract landscapes created with acrylics. A graduate of the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts de Paris in 1997 with highest honors, he quickly distinguished himself with a unique blend of technical precision and intuitive expression. He is the recipient of several awards, including a prize for printmaking, and has been featured in prestigious events such as the Printmaking Month in Paris and the Peter-Stuyvesant Foundation prize.
Claude's works are defined by a limited color palette – black, grey, brown, and blue tones – and techniques such as layering, dripping, erasure, and scratching. With high horizons and plunging perspectives, his compositions balance abstract and figurative dimensions, offering immersive, contemplative scenes. Each painting is created without preliminary drawing, guided instead by instinct and gesture.
His work has been exhibited widely in France and abroad, including the Salon de Montrouge, Salon de la Jeune Peinture, YIA-Paris, the Georges-Garret Museum in Vesoul, and the Pascale Cottard-Olsson Gallery in Stockholm. His paintings are part of numerous public and private collections, including those of the French National Library, the museums of Belfort and Vesoul, and the Artplu Contemporary Art Museum in Shanghai.
An exacting artist, Claude explores a poetic vision of landscape, crafting powerful visual compositions that unite silence, depth, and light. His pictorial universe invites viewers into a sensory experience, where paint becomes language.
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