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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Artwork framed.
Dimensions :
21.7x25.6in
About this artwork
This is a portrait of the owner of the nearby castle in Brittany around 1900.
The raw power of the master is evident in the massive profile of his Breton horse, and its excessive speed in relation to the sunken lane where the scene takes place. The man is pleased with himself.
Blown pigments render the bark of pollarded plane trees particularly well.
The canvas reuses (and therefore covers) a mid-19th-century painting that I restored before… use. It's not visible, but when you turn the painting over, the canvas is very old.
The frame is made of light wood nail-covering strips.
The canvas was exhibited at the Arplastix 2024 Exhibition at the Paris 7th Town Hall.
Martine Lapierre, trained at the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts (ENSBA) and passionate about oil painting, also explores screen printing, sculpture, watercolor, and digital art. Her unique technique combines blown pigments on gold leaf, creating a poetic realism within the Figurative Transposition movement. She develops backgrounds inspired by pareidolia and Japanese aesthetics, populating her animal works with unknown worlds. She infuses her paintings with a profound serenity, blending wonder at nature with reflection on the fragility of biodiversity.