Léon Pourtau
Léon Pourtau | |
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Born | 1868 Bordeaux, France |
Died | Atlantic Ocean, near Sable Island, Canada | 4 July 1898
Nationality | France |
Movement | Post-Impressionism, pointillism, Divisionism |
Léon Pourtau (1868[1] – 4 July 1898) was a French painter and musician.
At the age of 15, an apprentice typesetter, Pourtau left Bordeaux for Paris. He worked in a small restaurant on the Rue Lafayette, where musicians gathered Orchestre Lamoureux. Thanks to them Pourtau got a job as a concert clarinetist in a Café-chantant. He toured with a circus band where he would help set up the tent and bathe the elephants. Back in Paris he entered the Conservatoire de Paris. During this period he married, had two children, and become a professor at the Conservatoire de Lyon at the age of 22 – the youngest ever.
He met Georges Seurat, himself also a musician, who taught him the impressionist technique. He took the opportunity of a concert tour in the US, which, after two years, earned him 20,000 Francs. He also became principal clarinetist of the Boston Symphony Orchestra in 1894 at the invitation of conductor Emil Paur.[2] At the annual exhibition of fine art held in Philadelphia over the winter of 1896–1897, he exhibited a painting, Quatre heures de l'après-midi (Four o'clock in the afternoon). This would be his only showing.[3]
On 2 July 1898 Pourtau boarded the ocean liner La Bourgogne to return to Le Havre. On 4 July she was sunk by a collision in fog with the British sailing ship Cromartyshire off Cape Sable Island.[4] The painter died in the collision.
His works are now in the collections of several art museums including the Museo Soumaya, Mexico City and the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, Arizona.
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Lecture sous la lampe
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Paysage provençal
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St. Tropez
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Portrait de madame Vallad
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Solei Couchant
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Rue de Village
References
[edit]- ^ "4 e 1470 - Naissances - Table - 1868 Archives départementales de la Gironde".
- ^ https://www.stokowski.org/Principal_Musicians_Boston_Symphony.htm#Clarinet_Index_Point_
- ^ Souren Melikian, "Unexpected masterpieces at Maastricht fair", International Herald Tribune, 12 September 2006. Article consulté en ligne le 27.04.08.
- ^ "George Deslions v. La Compagnie Generale Transatlantique". 210 U.S. 95. US (210): 95. 18 May 1908 – via OpenJurist.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Léon Pourtau at Wikimedia Commons
- 1868 births
- 1898 deaths
- Artists from Bordeaux
- Conservatoire de Paris alumni
- 19th-century French painters
- French male painters
- French classical clarinetists
- French Post-impressionist painters
- Deaths due to shipwreck at sea
- 19th-century classical musicians
- Musicians from Bordeaux
- 19th-century French male artists
- French painter, 19th-century birth stubs