1969 Paris Blanc 5 Parisiens sur fond pourpre 5 Parisians on deep red, 1969

by Jochen Michaelis

Painting : mixed media 14.8 x 20.7 inch

$2,202

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About the artwork

Type

Unique work

Signature

Hand-signed by artist

Authenticity

Sold with certificate of Authenticity from the gallery

Invoice from the gallery


Medium

Painting: mixed media

Dimensions cm inch

14.8 x 20.7 inch Height x Width x Depth

Framing

Beige wood frame with glass

Artwork dimensions including frame

19.3 x 24.8 inch


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Artwork sold in perfect condition

Artwork location: France

Custom made oak wood frame with a fine art passe-partout by our framing studio.
Jochen Michaelis is a fine observer of the theater of Post-War life in Paris.
Jochen Michaelis was born in Postdam, Germany in 1938, he is the grandson of Georg Michaelis (1857-1936), Minister President of Prussia and in 1917 German imperial Chancellor of Germany, Heading the administration of Pomerania from 1918 to 1919. Jochen Michaelis studies painting at Kassel KunstAkademie, Germany. In Paris he studies very young at Beaux-Arts with painter Chapelain Midy and studies as well the art of lithography with professor Clarin. He will perfect his technical knowledge of art printing in Pratt Graphis Center of New York later on.
Michaelis, travels and exhibits his paintings of a keen and poetic observer of people in their daily life in Paris, New York, Berlin, also during a trip in Mexico.
In Paris he becomes famous very young and is exhibited in many art galleries. In 1958, he is only twenty years old and all the Press and Art critics are acclaiming his paintings and soon he belongs to all the important collections of contemporary art of Post-War Ecole de Paris Art.
PARIS ART OLYMPIADS
In 1991 and 1992, under the High Patronage of French President Mitterrand and Jacques Chirac, Mayor of Paris, MICHAELIS was selected to represent Germany with his Paris paintings, during the Art Olympiads organized by Lise Cormery Gallery for the CNOSF, French Olympic Committee. This international event was following the famous 1988 Art Olympiads in Seoul, South Korea, where a monumental sculptures Museum in open air and a Museum of International paintings was created for the world competition, in order to invite and show the art of major international artists of the 20th Century.
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GALERIE LISE CORMERY • France

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Jochen Michaelis, 1969 Paris Blanc 5 Parisiens sur fond pourpre 5 Parisians on deep red
Jochen Michaelis

Jochen Michaelis

Germany  • 1938

Jochen Michaelis was born in Potsdam in 1938, he is the grandson of Georg Michaelis (1857-1936), Minister-President of Prussia and, in 1917, Chancellor of the German Empire. He studied painting at the KunstAkademie in Kassel, Germany. In Paris, he came to study at a very young age at the Beaux-Arts in the studio of Chapelain Midy and also practiced the art of lithography with Clarin, a print technique that he continued to perfect at the Pratt Graphis Center in New York.

Michaelis, a keen observer and painter of scenes of life, is a tireless traveler, his imagination feeds the paintings of his numerous exhibitions in Paris, New York, Berlin and his trip to Mexico.

In Paris, he began his dazzling career as a painter at only 20 years old and his works were soon in all the collections that matter. All the press and the Parisian Art Critic saluted his talent from 1958, a few extracts from these important texts here illustrate his talent and the praise his work arouses.

For the art critic of the newspaper "ARTS" "Michaelis shows a fine talent. A layout which uses all the resources of the Bonnard or Lautrec poster, brings out in the foreground ambiguous faces drowned in immense earthy spaces, a blur of moving silhouettes scattered in the gray. Michaelis remains fascinated by the isolation of beings in crowds, by their vulnerability, their miserability. " For "Le Monde" " At twenty, Michaelis produced great, energetic and personal compositions where humor does not lose its rights." In "Combat" , a newspaper representing the French left, then the most powerful media for art criticism, with prestigious pens such as Albert Camus, Raymond Aron, André Gide, half a page of text "Michaelis is devoted to Michaelis in 1958. , it is a dream sometimes bitter, sometimes caricatural and full of tenderness. There is a frozen humor but also ardor and violence. It is a painting of manners and society, even if the world is ridiculous. " and "Combat" photographs him in the midst of dozens of his paintings strewn on the ground, among them, we see "La Parisienne au faux cils" painted in his expressionist way. For "Hors-Côte", " Michaelis observes humanity with a sharp eye: the world where we have fun, sadly at the cabaret, the girl who rolls her poor bump at the Porte Saint Denis, the Belles and the Beasts ferociously inhuman in their frenzied taste for life, with the slapping heads of revelers bathing in a rosy atmosphere of infinite tenderness. " Almost thirty years later, in 1984, "The Art Lover" wrote: "Watching Paris from the rooftops and transmitting it in a poetic interpretation, Michaelis and his stylized compositions are the reflection of everyday life. Passers-by, strollers, children inhabit these works in which his colors reject anguish." The art critic Gérard Weber writes that "as a young student at the Beaux-Arts, he went diving at the Moulin Rouge bistro, his workshop at Place Saint André des Arts became an artistic rendezvous. Michaelis's paintings, a snapshot of poetic emotion , - I have known them for twenty-five years, with a design that gives shape to the dreams of the eye. " Lise Cormery in her book "The Art of the Paris School of Post-War" writes: "It is not good to be German in France in the 50s, Berlin is destroyed, the wounds are still alive, yet Jochen Michaelis is so authentic, so charming and so devoted to painting that he becomes the favorite German artist of the post-war L'Ecole de Paris art market where he quickly finds his place and appreciates his life, which he calls "La Bohème" by quoting the Opera and Charles Aznavour. This handsome man, after having been the companion of a Grimaldi, settled for many years in Paris where he observed and painted scenes of life in Paris and Parisians, children, parents, workers and revelers in a dreamlike universe unlike any other and Parisian galleries exhibit his work, fortunately preserved, thanks to which we find this Paris which wants to chase away its dark ideas, full of joy and hope during the 50s, 60s and 70s. He painted this Paris, which has now disappeared, with its elegant knew how to dress inexpensively, its markets and its picturesque characters, caught on the spot in their daily life, on the way to their work or who meet at the corner bistro to remake the world. But if his work is poetic and dreamlike, it is not without denouncing the flaws in our societies, which did not escape the art critics of yesteryear.

In his 'PARIS LA NUIT', Michaelis paints the night owls that scatter in the city to better enjoy the nightclubs, theaters, nightlife,

In his WHITE PARIS, which the Utrillo of the 1910s loved in a figurative and architectural vein, Michaelis is interested in the human, the social, he paints and depicts two worlds that ignore each other at dawn, and his Paris Blanc plays on the melancholy of Paris, with its wan little mornings, its coffee rooms misted with alcohol, the fog that shrouds Paris with a pale veil all along the Seine. Michaelis observes two worlds that cross at dawn, the revelers or "Fêt'Arts" "Les Couche-tard" who come out of nightclubs and rush into the bistros that have just opened for a last coffee or cream. a last glass of alcohol, as workers rush through subway entrances and invisible sweepers are already starting their long day's work. The innocent, the lonely "The Awakened Dreamer", no doubt Michaelis himself observes, in a waking dream, the movement of these two worlds which ignore each other and share the time of Paris. There are those who are already busy while Paris is just awake. On the quays of the Seine emerge Parisians, but are they returning to finally sleep or are they on their way to a morning job? A whole real world and transcribed by the imagination of Michaelis is circumscribed in this enigmatic Paris which is agitated. Some people enjoy themselves fond of fashion which is out of fashion, we find there these gentlemen with headgear then very fashionable, the astrakhan toque, or dancing the Kazatchok in a club. All this shady little world animates the cafes. Michaelis does not forget the anonymous people, the crowd of Parisians, who greet each other then disappear in the pallor of day or night. Michaelis also questions us with his 1966 painting "Two tramps asleep in hope when day breaks on the Eiffel Tower", because yesterday as today two tramps are asleep in the hope of a new day dawning finally on our WHITE PARIS, the somnambulist, the tightrope walker, waiting for the hope of a Renaissance. Yesterday, in the same way, a tramp was hiding to sleep at night in the church of Saint Germain des Près, perhaps Michaelis in his bad days, certainly the great master of the Dark Way Mario Avati or Brancusi, who came on foot from Romania.

In its PARIS ORANGE, or PARIS RIT and PARIS DETRUIT, it is also The PARIS of the humble with "La Pelleteuse et les géraniums" and The PARIS of the arrogant of "Cocktail Party". Paradoxically, in this Paris of the Thirty Glorious Years, two worlds clash, The Paris of Humble and the Paris of L'arrogant.

In the Paris of Humble from "La Pelleteuse et les géraniums", The promoters' orange excavator does its work like a Parisian tries to survive in his Montparnasse being destroyed, in the hope of sparing his happy orange geraniums, like an act of peaceful resistance, punctuating the balcony of his modest home with seeds of life.

The Paris of L'arrogant, at the same time, with "Cocktail Party" and "Le Maître d'Hôtel", "Dancing in a box" is having fun and everything is allowed to well-off students. Paris vibrates with joie de vivre, in the 60s and 70s, life is still light and inexpensive there, a few students, "papa's sons", "provoke" and play at the grown-ups by making believe in a Revolution, even if "68" is only a Revolution of spoiled petty bourgeois children, they are allowed to do anything and they want power. This is how they will pick it up and never let go.

Meanwhile Michaelis, humble among the humble, chooses the color Orange for the dominant color of his paintings, he took out orange from the cupboards of the Academy in 1958 and soon artists, designers, haute couture, the loan- à-porter take on the color orange, which like a banner becomes like a hymn to energy, believed to be a better life.

Michaelis' gifts as an observer invite us into this now forgotten era when Paris was struggling in the orange effervescence. Urban fighters were bleeding orangey blood, clashing with nostalgia and the defense of a somewhat dilapidated Old Paris. And Paris Lumière fought for the Renaissance of its Enlightenment past, clashing violently against its slayers, lovers of concrete universes, in favor of a Paris City of Dust. The promoters and social landlords of the City of Paris are the new masters of the city of Paris and share it among themselves, like a huge cake they are going to feast on, destroying the artists' studios of Montparnasse and the buildings of the past stricken with he alignment of the Latin Quarter, where art flourished more than tickets, where artists at work, little known, remain the forgotten and must move. The inhuman and sprawling Defense raises its immense spurs. Meanwhile Michaelis, patiently and keenly observant, paints the birth of a new Paris, still full of hope and despair too. "

Some International solo shows

1958 Gallery of the Maison des Beaux-Arts Paris 1959 Galerie Glaser-Cordier, Paris 1962 1963 Permanent J. Montana Art Gallery 124, rue du faubourg Saint Honoré, Paris 1964 1967 Jacques Casanova Gallery, Palais-Royal, Paris 1971 Gallery Fischbacher, 33, rue de Seine, Paris 1979 Galerie Raesfeld, Cologne, Germany 1979 Galerie Nonson, 133 Wooster Street, Soho, New York 1982 Profile Gallery, 113 James Street, New York 1984 Galerie Raspail Rive Gauche, 221, blvd Raspail, Paris 1985 Profile Gallery, 113 Jane Street, New York 1985 1986 Galerie du Marais, 33, rue des Francs Bourgeois, Paris 1986 Galerie Raspail Rive Gauche, 221, blvd Raspail Paris 1987 Galerie du Marais, 33, rue des Francs Bourgeois, Paris 1988 Gallery Tullagasse 2, 7814 Breisach am Rhein, Germany 1989 Reece Gallery, 24 West 57 Street, New York 1991 1992 Galerie Lise Cormery Olympiades des Arts 1992 Montserrat Gallery, 584 Broadway, New York 1992 The Emerging Collector Gallery, 62, 2 nd Avenue, New York 1992 Gallery B assler Merzhauserstrasse 76, Freiburg, Germany 1992 Galerie Tullagasse 2, Breisach am Rhein, Germany 1993 Montserrat Gallery, 584 Broadway, New York 1993 Galerie Lise Cormery 1993 1994 1995 1997 Galerie Museum Egon Von Kameke, Postdam, Germany. Lukacs Gallery Toronto & De Silgahi Gallery, Burlington, Canada.

PARIS OLYMPIADS Michaelis will be exhibited by Galerie Lise Cormery in 1991 and 1992, during the Olympiades des Arts in Paris, Michaelis being part of the German delegation. In 1991 and 1992, during international events under the aegis of President Mitterrand and the Mayor of Paris, Jacques Chirac, he was selected to represent Germany with his paintings of "Paris", during the Arts Olympics organized by the Gallery Lise Cormery, for the CNOSF, French National Olympic and Sports Committee, on the occasion of the 1992 Olympic Games in France. This international event followed the Seoul Arts Olympics where the city founded for this competition a Museum of International Paintings and SOMA, an open-air monumental sculpture museum, with guest artists from all over the world to exhibit and represent the twentieth century art.

International Art Critic Press

1958 "Arts" 14.10. 1958, "Le Monde" October 17, 1958, "L'Amateur d'Art" October 25, 1958, "Le Figaro" 10. 1958, "Combat" October 27, 1958, "Masks and Faces" September 1958, "Information" October 1958. 1962 "Echos des Arts" 10. 1962, "Le Hors-Cote" March & April, "Combat" Avril. 1963 "Les Arts", "Combat" March 8 & 23, "ARTS", "Les Echos", "Pariser Kurier", "Die Welt", "Carnet des Arts". 1964 "Combat", "ARTS". 1967 "Public Health". 1968 Cover Cover "The Violet Legion, Review of The Legion of Honor, of the Academic Palms Arts and Letters". 1979 "Manhattan East" New York. 1982 1984 "Art Speak" New York. "ART New York". 1994 "Spiegel", "Der Welt". 1984 "The Art Lover" 1986 "The Art Lover".

Some publications

Gerhard Werner Weber, Solange Lemaire, Gérard Weber, Catherine de Hulewicz, François Pluchart, Cate Miodini, Phyllis Lee, Palmer Poroner, Elvira Kühn, Claude Lesuer, Claude Dorval, Lise Cormery.


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