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Bram van Velde


1895-1981

Bio

Bram van Velde belongs to the older generation of abstract expressionists. He grows up in Zoeterwoude (near Leiden), in a working class family of four children. At the age of twelve, he gets a job at a home furnishing company, where he develops himself as a decorative painter. His employer notices his painting talent, and with his support Van Velde leaves for Germany, where he joins an artists’ colony.
In 1925, Van Velde leaves for France. He resides alternately in Paris, Corsica and Majorca, and lives there in misery and poverty.
After Wold War II, Van Velde has a number of exhibitions, but yet, without success. He still lives in great poverty and finds himself in an almost permanent state of depression. A successful sales exhibition in 1957 heralds a turning point in his career, eventually culminating in world fame. One year later – he is over sixty by then – he gets his first museum exhibition in the Kunsthalle Bern, followed in 1959 by an exhibition in the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam.
In 1989, eight years after his death, the Bonnefantenmuseum and the Centre George Pompidou jointly organise a major retrospective of Van Velde’s work in Maastricht and Paris.

Portret Van Velde bij biografie
photo Musée d'Art et d'Histoire de Genève
Werk

Limpide

1981
Lithograph on Arches in eleven colours
62.3 x 80.2 cm

Zonder titel

1980
Lithograph on Arches in five colours
63 x 47.5 cm

Untitled

1967
Lithograph on Arches
48.5 x 66.2 cm

Éclatement

1978
Lithograph on Arches in seven colours
87.7 x 62.1 cm

Untitled

1977
Lithograph on Arches in nine colours
58.9 x 67.9 cm

Untitled

1966
Lithograph on Arches
56.5 x 76.4 cm

Untitled

1977
Lithograph on Arches in six colours
50 x 70 cm (sheet), 32.6 x 56 cm (image)

Untitled

1966
Lithograph on Arches
62 x 79.7 cm (sheet), 47 x 72 cm (image)