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Wikipedia

Louis Dewis

Louis Dewis (1872–1946)[1] was the pseudonym of Belgian Post-Impressionist painter Louis DeWachter,[1] who was also an innovative and highly successful businessman. He helped organize and managed the first department store chain.

Louis Dewis
Born
Isidore Louis DeWachter

(1872-11-01)1 November 1872[1]
Died5 December 1946(1946-12-05) (aged 74)[1]
Biarritz, France
Known forPainting
Notable workL’innondation, 1920
Port of Villefranche, 1930
AwardsLégion d'honneur
Chevalier (Knight) 1914 & 1932
(France)

Grande Médaille de la Reconnaissance française
(France)

Officier d'Académie
Silver Palms 1912
(France)

Officier de l'Instruction Publique
Golden Palms 1922
(France)

Lauréat du Salon des Artistes Français
(France)

Médaille de la Société d'Instruction et d'Education Populaire
(France)

Order of Leopold II
Knight
(Belgium)

King Albert Medal
(Belgium)[2]

Order of Glory
San'f al-Talet (Officer)
(Tunisia)[1]
Patron(s)Georges Petit

Early life

He was born Isidore Louis DeWachter in Leuze, Belgium,[1][3] the eldest son among the seven children of Isidore Louis DeWachter and Eloise Desmaret DeWachter.[4] The father went by Isidore, while the future Dewis was called Louis. The name "DeWachter" has Flemish roots, however Louis DeWachter always considered himself a Walloon.[1]

Isidore and his two brothers (Benjamin and Modeste) originated the idea of the chain department store when they formed Maisons Dewachter (Houses of Dewachter) in 1868,[5] which they formally incorporated as the Belgian firm Dewachter frères (Dewachter Brothers) on 1 January 1875.[6] For business purposes, they had decided not to use the capital "W" in the family name and because the chain became so famous, published references to the family would also be spelled "Dewachter". By the time of Dewis's death, the family had adopted the spelling "Dewachter" as well.[1]

Maisons Dewachter introduced the idea of ready-made – or ready-to-fit – clothing for men and children, and specialty clothing such as riding apparel and beachwear.[6][7] Isidore owned 51% of the company, while his brothers split the remaining 49%.[6] They started with four locations: the Walloon city of Leuze (where Louis was born), La Louvière and two at Mons.[5][6] Under Isidore's (and later Louis') leadership, Maisons Dewachter would become one of the most recognized names in Belgium and France.[8]

Soon after the company was formed, Isidore and his family moved to Liège to open another branch.[7] It was in that industrial city that Louis established a lifelong friendship[9] with Richard Heintz (fr:Richard Heintz) (1871–1929),[10] who also became an internationally known landscape artist. Heintz is considered the outstanding representative of the Liège school of landscape painting,[11][12] a movement that greatly influenced Dewis's early work.

When Louis was 14, the family moved to Bordeaux, France, where Isidore established what would be the chain's flagship store.[3][7] Louis, who had begun his studies at the Athénée Royal Liège, continued lycée (high school) at Bordeaux.[3] For the rest of his life, he would remain an étranger – a Belgian citizen living in France.[13]

Family

 
Maison Dewachter and family residence (above), 36 Rue de St-Cathérine, Bordeaux (2006 photo)
 
Maison Dewachter Bordeaux's appearance as depicted on its 1904 letterhead
 
Maison Dewachter promotional post card showing a Dewachter sign at the entrance of Bordeaux's Public Garden (1907)

Louis DeWachter married Bordeaux socialite Elisabeth Marie Florigni (12 August 1873 - 25 August 1952) on July 16, 1896.[7] Elisabeth was the daughter of Joseph-Jules Florigni[14] (1842 - 14 April 1919) and Rose Lesfargues Florigni[14] (1843 - 11 September 1917).

There was a feeling among some members of the Florigni family, which traced its roots back to the court of Catherine de' Medici,[15] that "Babeth" had "married down."[7]

Jules Florigni administered the Bordeaux regional newspapers the Girond and La Petite Gironde[16][17] and was Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur (Knight of the French Legion of Honor).[18]

Elisabeth's brother, Robert (1881–1945),[15] authored some 30 popular novels, several stage plays and at least ten screen plays.[19] He was also a Paris-based[20] journalist on the staff of La Petite Gironde and, like his father, Robert Florigni was named Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur.[21]

In 1919, Dewis's older daughter, Yvonne Elisabeth Marie, was a student at the University of Bordeaux where she met and, after a whirlwind courtship, married Bradbury Robinson (1884–1949), a graduate student from America. He was a widowed army officer (a combat veteran of the Great War) and a medical doctor who, after being discharged in the United States, had returned to France to continue his studies.[15] The couple would travel around Western Europe as Dr. Robinson oversaw immigrant screening for the U.S. Public Health Service.[7][15] In 1906, Robinson had gained fame in the United States for having thrown the first forward pass in an American football game.[22] The couple moved to the United States in 1926. They had seven children together, and Yvonne also gained a stepson from her husband's first marriage (his first wife having died in 1914).[15]

In her memoirs, Yvonne remembers that in the early years of Dewis's career, her mother regarded her father's painting with benign indifference. She writes that Elisabeth DeWachter was pleased with her husband's choice of "hobbies" in one sense, telling her friends, "at least it's not noisy."[7]

As the years passed, Elisabeth took more interest. It was she who maintained Dewis's scrapbook of critical reviews for three decades.[13]

His younger daughter and only other child, Andrée Marguerite Elisabeth (24 September 1903 in Rouen, France[7] - 11 May 2002 in Paris), married businessman Charles Jérôme Ottoz (1903–1993) in 1925,[7] who proved to be less than supportive of his talented father-in-law.[13]

Ottoz had his own connections to the art world. He was the namesake of his grandfather Jérôme (1819–1885),[23] the well-known Paris color merchant and art collector (especially of Corots) who loved to show his paintings to visitors at his shop on the rue Pigalle.[24] Ottoz's grandfather was also the subject of the famous portrait painted in 1876 by Edgar Degas.[25]

A serious student of art, Andrée was passionate in her admiration of her father's work. As Yvonne lived in the States during the last 20 years of Dewis's life, Andrée was the artist's only child to witness the most important years of his career. She was so emotionally involved in his painting that one day Dewis wondered aloud whether his daughter would have loved him as much, "if I'd been a grocer." Years later, Andrée tearfully recalled assuring her father that she would.[13]

Life as an artist delayed, success in business immediate

Young Louis had displayed an interest (and astonishing talent) in art at the age of 8 – but Isidore was enraged at the thought that his offspring might waste his time with something as useless as painting. In a vain attempt to break his young son of his "bad habit," he would, on occasion, throw away or burn the boy’s canvases, paints and brushes.[3][26]

The youngster's love of art could not be deterred. It could, however, be overwhelmed by business and family responsibilities.[27] As the eldest son, Louis was expected to take over the family business. This was a duty that his father would not allow him to shirk and which made Louis' dream of life as an artist impossible.[27]

Father and son, however, apparently made a good team. They doubled the number of cities and towns served by Maison Dewachter from 10 to 20 in Louis' first dozen years with the firm. Some cities had multiple stores, such as Bordeaux, which had three.[28][29] For more than a decade, it was Louis' job to move from one place to another in France to open new stores, which would then be run by one cousin or another.[7]

By 1908, Louis was back in Bordeaux managing the flagship Grand Magasin (Department Store). He assumed ultimate responsibility for 15 of the Maisons Dewachter.[7][30]

The reluctant merchant found a creative outlet as an active and innovative marketer. He ran ads in newspapers; distributed illustrated catalogues; placed advertising on billboards and on trolleys; and published several series of promotional postal cards. Some of the cards featured famous art, others humorous cartoons and another series bore images of Maison Dewachter signage that had been temporarily erected at well known locations.[31]

In addition to the management of an international chain of department stores, Louis was forced to assume an additional burden when a brother lost a small fortune gambling. With his father too infirm to deal with the situation, it once again fell to the oldest son to do his duty and settle the enormous debt. Louis had no choice but to borrow the sum from a very rich relation, something that humiliated him to his core. So, as a matter of honor, he insisted on repaying the loan with 100% interest – over the protests of the lender and everyone else in the family. As a result, the task took Louis several years.[27] These responsibilities and World War I combined to condemn him to what was a frustrating life as a merchant, however successful, until after his father's death and the conclusion of the war.[27]

Sunday painter

Throughout his business career, Louis DeWachter maintained an atelier in his home and was essentially a Sunday painter.[7]

His few surviving early works (dating from 1885 into the early 1900s) were unsigned because his father refused to allow him to sully the family name by associating it with such a frivolous undertaking.[7] In about 1916, Dewachter signed his first work with the pseudonym "Louis Dewis" (pronounced Lew-WEE Dew-WEES). His nom d'artiste "Dewis" is composed of the first three letters of his last name – followed by the first two letters of his first name – Isidore.

As a wealthy merchant, his interest in art was not financially motivated. His daughter Yvonne wrote that, while living in Bordeaux, he turned down at least one offer of sponsorship – an offer conditioned on him giving up "the tailoring business."

Father told him [the hopeful sponsor] to mind his own business, that he would take care of his family the way he wanted to and nobody was going to tell him what to do. Well, maybe he felt free the rest of his life, but real artistic success was never his. No doubt he was a great artist and had recognition in a certain arty circle, but ... he could have been as famous as Utrillo or Picasso ... (l)ike everything else, it is a matter of publicity.[7]

And, Yvonne recalled that the young Dewis made "real artistic success" even more difficult to achieve.

Another handicap was that he hated to part with any of his paintings. I remember as a girl, when anyone came to his studio and wanted to buy something, he always found some kind of excuse for not selling.[7]

First exhibitions

Dewis began to focus on his art about 1916, which motivated him to adopt the pseudonym "Dewis." He was 43 years old.[3]

In the summer of that year, Dewis staged what was probably his first exhibition at the Imberti Galleries in Bordeaux, news of which reached across the trenches that divided France in the midst of World War I – to his native Belgium. Le Vingtième Siècle (The Twentieth Century) was clandestinely publishing a one-page edition in German-occupied Brussels.[32] The paper somehow obtained a review of Dewis's exhibition for its 22 July 1916, issue. It was placed at the top of the page and titled: "Our artists in France." It expressed sentiments that critics would echo for the next thirty years:

[S]ome "singing" landscapes attract the eye. The brush, soaked in the matutinal coolness or in the blue mist of the windrow, has more freedom and lightness. It emerges from the cliché. This is how he must paint, with no other care than to allow his soul to vibrate like a bird, in the light.
The skies are like ours, changing, full of music ... The subtle movement of the waters seduces the artist; and it renders their undulating countenances a thousand reflections.[33]

In 1917, as part of Dewis's considerable efforts to aid his Belgian countrymen (for which he was honored by both Belgium and France), he helped organize Le Salon franco-belge in the Bordeaux Public Garden.[3][34] It was a charity event for the benefit of Belgian war refugees sponsored by the Belgian Benevolent Society of the South West and the Girondin Artists. This event was the first of a series of exhibitions in which the art of Louis Dewis would draw serious attention from some prominent art critics of the era.

Louis Dewis embodies the Flemish spirit, in love with colorings that are warm and harmonious. He treats tenderly the humble motifs reinforcing the simplicity of their soberly translated soul. But he also adores the sumptuous symphonies in which the greens, the reds and the golds sing, as he lets himself be charmed by the veil of a mist.[35]
The painter Louis Dewis has just made a small exhibition of his works at the Galerie Marguy [Paris], which has obtained the greatest and most legitimate success. This excellent painter, whose talent asserts itself at each new exhibition, this time gives us landscapes quite crowned with success. We must mention in particular: The Reapers, a very luminous work; The Canal at Bruges, of a character well interpreted; St. Jean de Luz, which shines with the sun of the South; The Stone Bridge at Rouen, etc., but we should mention them all.[36]

The noted Belgian art and literary critic Henry Dommartin (sometimes spelled Henri) met Dewis at the 1917 exhibition and became a fervent admirer of his fellow countryman's work.[9] He once served as the State Librarian at Brussels and had heroically engineered the rescue of truckloads of Belgian art treasures from what was almost certain destruction shortly after the Germans occupied Belgium in 1914.[37] Dommartin was the first and most insistent among Dewis's circle of friends to argue that the artist should concentrate solely on his art.[13][38]

From this period until his death in Biarritz in 1946, Dewis's landscapes were shown regularly at major exhibitions across western Europe.[26] They attracted favorable reviews in the international press, purchases from major museums and the highest decorations from the governments of three countries. However, the highest achievement of fame eluded him.

True, Dewis had finally escaped the dictates of his overbearing father that had stymied his career for almost three decades. He was now free to focus on painting. He could spend more time in the studio in his family's large apartment at 36-40 Rue de St-Cathérine over the Maison Dewachter in Bordeaux. But, his career would be marked by uncommon public relations misfortune.[4] As daughter Andrée (bilingual, like her sister) would say in English many years later, "Dad had hard luck!"[13]

Georges Petit - the opportunity of a lifetime turns to disaster

 
Georges Petit

The renowned and influential French art dealer, Georges Petit, was impressed by the Belgian's work at the 1917 exhibition in Bordeaux".[39] His initial reaction, as he once told Dewis, was "vous êtes un tendre" ("you are tender-hearted").[40]

The support of the owner of Galerie Georges Petit could be life-changing. According to Émile Zola, who knew the Parisian art world inside and out, Petit was "the 'apotheosis' of dealers when the Impressionist market soared and competition among marchands... became intense."[41]

Petit had attained the highest degree of success and influence in his profession. His historic Expositions internationales de Peinture had featured works by Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Auguste Rodin, John Singer Sargent, Alfred Sisley and James McNeill Whistler – and he conducted the sales of the works of Degas, after that artist's death in 1917.[42]

He pressured Dewis – scolding him that he was wasting his life "selling clothes.[43] Petit urged him to sell his interest in Maison Dewachter and move to Paris – telling him, "come paint for me in Paris and I will make you famous."[43]

Finally, Dewis relented. He sold his majority interest in Dewachter frères and relocated his family from Bordeaux to Paris in May 1919.[39] But, only a year later, Georges Petit was dead at the age of 64.

Dewis was on his own... and he was no self-promoter.[13]

Painting for himself

In turning his career over to Petit, Dewis had taken the biggest risk of his life and lost.

He found himself in Paris without a sponsor. He, of course, still had resources from the sale of his business. So, the former merchant rented an atelier[13] and began painting for public exhibition. From the beginning, his work was highly regarded and well reviewed, as this 1921 appraisal by the art critic at Paris' Revue moderne des arts et de la vie (Modern Review of the Arts and Life) attests:

Few landscape artists, in my opinion, among our modern painters, reach such a profound expression of truth in a finer art form. This artist knows admirably how to compose his paintings, while maintaining a note of reality which removes any impression of being formulaic. Modern, clearly, by the richness of the palette, by the skillful distribution of color and light, by the creation of this true atmosphere so rarely achieved, it nevertheless continues the high tradition of the old masters by the consciousness of drawing, respect for perspective and harmony of composition.
And all these elements combine to create real life on the canvas, palpitating with the intimate emotion of the artist before nature.[44]

Despite such praise, Dewis's work was never heavily promoted.[13] He had realized that Petit's legendary prowess as a marchand d'art (art dealer) was the perfect complement to his own talents. But, now involuntarily and totally independent, Dewis simply did not have the drive – nor the desire – to achieve commercial success.[13]

And, at this juncture of his life, Dewis was to encounter another antagonist.[26] His son-in-law, Jérôme Ottoz, was also a recipient of the Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur – recognition for his accomplishments in business. He resented his talented and (gallingly) more famous beau-père (father-in-law). Jérôme possessed a demeanor reminiscent of Isidore's and, as such, dominated the timid artist... at one point talking Dewis out of accepting a lucrative offer of sponsorship by another Parisian art dealer.[13]

Eventually, Dewis reconciled himself to his fate. And, happily so. He was perfectly content painting what he wanted to paint... and not producing what was in fashion or what art promoters thought would "sell."[13] He was free to experiment with different techniques, as daughter Yvonne recalled:

He tried the impressionist style and the pointille and the heavy brush stroke – improving every time – but always his coloring, regardless of his method, was gorgeous. His skies were breathtaking and his water flowing on and on carrying you along in a dream.[7]

He told his family, "I paint as the bird sings" – for the pure joy of expressing his emotions.[13]

Between the World Wars

Dewis exhibited throughout France and Belgium in the 1920s and 30s, as well as in Germany, Switzerland and what were at the time the French colonies of Algeria and Tunisia. Collectors and museums from Europe, South America and Japan purchased his work.[3]

Critics commented on the maturation of his art – such as in this 1929 review by Brussel's Het Laatste Nieuws.

The superb works that the painter Louis Dewis has just hung in our theater deserve the deepest interest.
Although Dewis has long been established in France, he is still able to communicate admirably that special and intimate feeling that is found in many corners of Flanders and Wallonia, recreating them with the enthusiasm of his artistic soul, yet faithful and true.
The art of Louis Dewis appears in the magnificent maturity of a learned and profound spirit of observation put at the service of a firm technique, devoid of any indication of contrivances in pursuit of effects. Everything proves that among our Belgian artists, Dewis does not occupy a secondary position.[45]

The Flemish critic at Het Volk also remarked on the sincerity of Dewis's work after visiting the same exhibition.

No clutter, no affected detail, but rather works of broad design and which, in powerful touches, express the emotions and aspirations of the artist.[46]

Unlike the younger painter of Bordeaux described by his daughter Yvonne – in Paris, Dewis devoted nearly all of his time to painting in his atelier at 28 rue Chaptal or sketching at locations across France and Belgium. He was prolific, selling hundreds of paintings in his career.[13]

International recognition

Although he concentrated on his art only in the last 30 years of his life, he was already well known in France and Belgium – and beyond – for his high profile in the clothing industry – and for his civic and charitable activities, which he began in the 1890s, when he was still in his 20s.[47]

He served as the president of an organization in the South of France that worked in the interests of the suffering population of Belgium – and refugees from that country – during the Great War. He gained international attention for publicly urging the French government to treat Belgians with less suspicion (as potential German collaborators) and more compassion.[48]

His efforts on behalf of his Belgian countrymen were recognized by the French Republic with the Grande Médaille de la Reconnaissance française (Grand Medal of French Gratitude). France named him a Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur for his accomplishments in business in 1914,[49] and again as a Chevalier in 1932 for "more than 30 years of artistic practice."[50]

He was named an Officier d'Académie (Silver Palms) in 1912, when he was still painting as an amateur,[51] and he was named Officier de l'Instruction Publique (Golden Palms) in 1922, three years after relocating to Paris.[52] He also received the Médaille de la Société d'Instruction et d'Education Populaire (Medal of the Society of Instruction and Public Education).[47]

Belgium awarded him the King Albert Medal and named him a Knight of the Order of Leopold II.[3]

Tunisia made him an Officer of the Order of Glory.[3]

His art was included in multiple Salons – taking a prize in 1930 – and it received the high honor of being chosen for Paris' Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne (1937).[3][53]

What critics judged to be one of his most beautiful canvases, Vue de Bruges (View of Bruges), was purchased by the French Republic for the Palace of the League of Nations in Geneva, Switzerland.[53]

Dewis was a Lauréat of the Société des Artistes Français, an associate member of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, a founding member of the Salon des Tuileries and of the Société des peintres du Paris moderne and of the Société royale des beaux-arts of Belgium, among others.[3][53]

Final years at Biarritz

Dewis and his family fled Paris for the South West shortly before the Nazi occupation of 1940, initially staying with relatives in Bayonne.[13]

By great good fortune in this time of war, they heard of a villa that was becoming available in Biarritz. An American was heading back to the United States and selling a large house with lovely gardens that he had named for his wife: Villa Pat. The family purchased the home and it was here that Dewis would paint for the last seven years of his life.[13]

Biarritz wasn't far from Bordeaux, where Dewis had lived from the age of 14 to his marriage and from 1908-1919.

He was once again inspired by the countryside of the Pays Basque.

Since travel was greatly limited during the occupation, Dewis often found his subjects within his own garden, in nearby parks and along the Atlantic coast.

Contemporary assessment of his career

Louis Dewis died of cancer at Villa Pat[13] in late 1946. Bordeaux's Sud-Ouest newspaper, successor to La Petite Gironde, which had been administered decades earlier by his maternal grandfather, published its lamentations under the headline, "A Painter Is No Longer With Us."

[A] great painter has just passed away in Biarritz: Louis Dewis.
The man was as good as the painter, for whom Biarritz, Bayonne and the Basque Coast quite often manifested a sincere admiration since he retired to the resort.
Through his acclaimed talent, he brought something new to this region, for which, as well as for the painting, his death is a great sorrow.[53]

The critic at the Journal of Biarritz had no trouble finding the word that he felt best described Dewis:

If we have to characterize Dewis's talent in a word, we could say that he was one of the most sincere landscape painters of modern times. Behind the big strokes which he was particularly fond of, a quivering emotion can always be felt, since Dewis painted with his heart as much as his brushes.[3]

He was buried in the family tomb at Bordeaux's Cimetière de la Chartreuse [fr].[54]

A legacy in hibernation

Dewis's devoted daughter Andrée had returned to live in her Paris co-propriété (condominium) after the war ended. Except for the period of occupation, the flat in the 17th arrondissement of Paris was her home from 1935 until her death in 2002.[13] The spacious apartment, just a few blocks from the Parc Monceau, occupied the entire top floor of a 19th-century building.

Andrée had made many extended visits to Biarritz during her father's illness.[13] After he died, she was intent on preserving everything related to his artistic career. She carefully crated up the entire contents of his atelier at Villa Pat.[26] Since she would be staying with her widowed mother in Biarritz for a while, she shipped the crates to Paris for safekeeping in the temporary custody of two trusted nephews,[13] the noted architects Édouard Niermans (1903–1984) and Jean Niermans (1897–1989), Officier de la Légion d’Honneur (fr:Jean Niermans).[55] Their father, Édouard-Jean Niermans (fr:Édouard-Jean Niermans) (1859–1928),[56] celebrated as the architect of the "Café Society" and Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur, married Dewis's sister, Louise Marie Héloïse DeWachter (1871–1963), in 1895. Dewis was very close to Louise[13] and in her home the artist socialized with the likes of Auguste Renoir and Jules Chéret.[57]

Eventually, the boxes would be transferred to the attic of Andrée's co-propriété[26] and placed in a locked room that was originally designed as maid's quarters. There the sturdy wooden boxes would sit, untouched, for nearly 50 years.[26]

Dewis rediscovered

Dewis’s art had survived and blossomed despite the opposition of his father, the devastating loss of Petit, an antagonistic son-in-law and two world wars.[1]

But now, it was all locked away and collecting dust. Jérôme had absolutely no interest in any effort to construct a legacy for his deceased rival.[13]

As the years passed, Andrée had all but given up hope that her beloved father might be remembered.[13]

By the mid-1990s, Jérôme was dead. Through a chance conversation with a visiting great-nephew from the States[26] (a grandson of her sister Yvonne), the then 92-year-old Andrée and the young American opened the crates and immediately resolved to return Dewis's work to the public.[4]

The more than 400 paintings and hundreds of sketches[26] that they found were catalogued. Experts were retained to evaluate the vast collection and what were judged to be the most outstanding pieces were cleaned and properly framed for public exhibition.

The effort culminated in the exhibition Dewis Rediscovered at the Courthouse Galleries[1][58] in Portsmouth, Virginia in 1998. It was the first public showing of Dewis's art in more than half a century.[59]

Historical perspective

Dr. Linda McGreevy wrote essays for the catalogues for the first two Dewis exhibits in America.[1] McGreevy, who was a Professor of Art History and Criticism and the Chair of the Art Department at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, is an expert in French art between the two world wars.[1][60] She described how Dewis's art was rediscovered in the attic of the Paris flat of Dewis/DeWachter's daughter:

On the walls of the apartment in which she'd lived for over fifty years were works not only by her father but by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot.[23] During the course of this visit, and others over the next several months, [Andrée] recalled that there were probably more of her father's work stored in the attic, though she figured they'd probably all rotted away inasmuch as they'd been there since his death in 1946. What they found were... crates that, while caked in dust, the paintings themselves were in remarkably good condition. And stored in the ceiling were still more rolled canvases, numerous sketchbooks, journals, even his palette.[4]
Louis Dewis was hardly an unknown artist in his time, but then again, he was no Monet or Degas either (both of whom he knew intimately). Louis Dewis's work resembles most closely that of Corot, who was his strongest influence, except that it tends to borrow from the Impressionists a more resplendent use of color. Dewis painted mostly landscapes, those of the Belgian towns and countryside he knew all his life. But by the end of WW II, the popular art styles of the time had not only changed drastically but the art world he'd known had fled Paris entirely. When he died, it was as if he took his life's work with him, except for less than a dozen examples in family hands in this country, and the few on the walls of his daughter's apartment in Paris. However, thanks to the perseverance of [Dewis's American great-grandson] and... the Portsmouth Art Museum, the work of Louis Dewis, and perhaps his spirit too, have returned from the dead...[4]

The Belgian ambassador to the United States, Alex Reyn, was an honored guest at Dewis Rediscovered, after which he requested that three Dewis paintings be lent for permanent exhibition in his country's embassy in Washington, DC.[26] Personally making the selections, he chose Snow in the Ardennes as the only painting to be displayed in the anteroom to the ambassador's office.[1]

In the catalogue for 2002's Encore: Dewis Rediscovered, Professor McGreevy observed that "art history has worked against Dewis's inclusion" in what she described as "the modernist pantheon" which was:

... continuing to relegate artists solely concerned with landscape to a lower echelon, following a hierarchy of subject matter established in the 17th century. It's only in the last decade that the history of art in mid-War France has been reevaluated and expanded in scope. This is significant for Dewis, since his most productive period spanned those two decades.[61]
Now he seems poised, like so many others, to claim a place in modernism's broader trajectory. His contributions to the French version of Regionalism, his luminous paintings from the pristine reaches of Frances arriere-pays (back country), alongside the Corot-inspired images of his native Belgium recovering slowly from the war's ravages, may well receive the recognition their creator deserved long ago.[61]

Since their rediscovery in 1996, more than 100 of Dewis's paintings found in his daughter's attic have been cleaned and framed and are lent to museums for the public to enjoy.[1][26]

Orlando Museum of Art

On 1 May 2018, the Orlando Museum of Art (OMA) announced that it may become the permanent home of the rediscovered collection of Dewis paintings and related materials.[62]

OMA staged a mini-exhibition of Dewis works beginning in May 2018[63] and a full exhibit of more than 100 Dewis paintings in January 2019.[26][64] In the catalogue for that exhibition, OMA Senior Curator Hansen Mulford provided this perspective:

While his earliest works were influenced by Impressionism, he quickly developed a personal style of expressive realism in line with this mainstream in French art of the 1920s and 30s. His paintings of regional locales throughout France featured views that were idealized and imbued with a sense of place. Dewis’s works draw upon classical models of French landscape painting such as those of Camille Corot. His compositions are balanced and orderly, following the conventions of depicting deep space through a recession of forms and aerial perspective. Broad planes of color define the topography, land, water, sky, and architecture, while bold diagonal elements like roads and rivers draw the eye into the scene. His brushwork is often quick and direct, rendering forms clearly without excessive detail. Though his style is anchored in a historic tradition, the simplicity of his best work is wholly modern and aligned with his contemporaries.
While descriptive detail enriches all of Dewis’s paintings, he rarely painted directly from life. Instead, he worked from drawings, which allowed him to edit and distill the expressive elements of each scene. Observed impressions were important, but memory was essential to his practice, allowing him the distance to find his own order in each composition. About this he said, "it is this memory that, transmuted by my sensitivity, gives to my works life and this truth that you love to find there." While Dewis was a realist, he was also interested in creating emotional resonance with his painting that did not require excessive detail, saying "I never seek a slavish copy of nature. This is the fundamental thought of the art of Corot, Cazin, Cézanne, Van Gogh, Gauguin, and which the latter expresses through the aphorism: 'In painting there is suggestion rather than description.'”[9]

OMA opened another exhibit of Dewis's work on September 24, 2020, which continued through May 1, 2022.[65]

Gallery

Sources

  • Catalogues for Dewis Rediscovered (1998) and Encore: Dewis Rediscovered (2002), Courthouse Galleries, Portsmouth, Virginia
  • L'avenir de la Dordogne (Périgueux, France), 5 January 1918
  • La Petite Gironde (Bordeaux, France), 11 June 1918
  • Memoirs of Yvonne DeWachter Robinson Young
  • Transcribed interviews with Andrée DeWachter Ottoz (1995–2001)
  • LouisDewis.com
  • YouTube Video of "Dewis Rediscovered" Exhibition at Portsmouth, Virginia in 1998

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n LouisDewis.com
  2. ^ "Medaille du Roi Albert".
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m A Great Artist Disappears, Journal de Biarritz (Biarritz, France); 17 December 1946
  4. ^ a b c d e Catalogue for Dewis Rediscovered (1998), Courthouse Galleries, Portsmouth, Virginia
  5. ^ a b Le Pantheon de L'Industrie (Paris, France); 1891, Page 20
  6. ^ a b c d Annexes to the Belgian Monitor of 1875. Acts, Extracts of Acts, Minutes and Documents relating to Corporations, Book #3, Page 67
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Memoirs of Yvonne DeWachter Robinson Young, written in English
  8. ^ "Dewachter" stores were still operating in 2019. The stores in Montpelier were still using the Dewachter trade name but had no apparent connection to the founding family. The 1895 founding date promoted on the 2019 website may have been the date the Montpelier Maison Dewachter location originally opened.
  9. ^ a b c Mulford, Hansen (2019). Louis Dewis: A Belgian Post-Impressionist. Orlando, Florida: Orlando Museum of Art. p. 5.
  10. ^ Wallonie-en-Ligne on Richard Heintz (in French)
  11. ^ Liège school of landscape painting website
  12. ^ Richard Heintz at the Liège school of landscape painting website
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Transcribed interviews with Andrée DeWachter Ottoz (1995–2001)
  14. ^ a b Annuaire du tout Sud-Ouest illustré : comprenant les grandes familles et les notabilités de Bordeaux et des départements 1907-1908, Page 382
  15. ^ a b c d e Michigan Centennial History, Volume 5, pages 109 to 111, 1939
  16. ^ Bouchon, Georges and Gounouilhou, Gustave; Histoire d'une imprimerie bordelaise, 1600-1900: les imprimeries G. Gounouilhou, La Gironde, La petite Gironde; 1 January 1901; Pages 511 and 602
  17. ^ Journal officiel de la République française (Paris, France); 15 November 1908; Page 7750
  18. ^ Annuaire de la presse française et étrangère et du monde politique (Paris, France); 1909 edition; Director Paul Bluysen; Page 280
  19. ^ Canjels, Rudmer; "Distributing Silent Film Serials: Local Practices, Changing Forms, Cultural Transformation"; Routledge; 2011; Page 197 – In 1921, Robert Florigni adapted the screen plays for 10 episodes of the 15-episode film serial "The Sky Ranger"; George B. Seitz Productions (for Pathé Exchange)
  20. ^ Azais, Jean Alphonse; "Annuaire international des lettres et des arts de langue ou de culture franc̜aise"; M. Jean Azais; 1921; Page 121 – Pierre-Robert Florigni lived at 19 boulevard Montmarte in Paris' 2nd Arrondissement
  21. ^ French Wikipedia: Robert Florigni
  22. ^ Nelson, David;The Anatomy of a Game: Football, the Rules, and the Men Who Made the Game; University of Delaware Press; 1994; Page 129
  23. ^ a b Wikimedia Commons page for Ottoz family tomb at Cimetière du Père-Lachaise in Paris. Note: Andrée Ottoz's husband Jérôme probably inherited the Corots in their residence from his grandfather's collection. Dewis cited Corot as an inspiration to his own work.
  24. ^ The Sun (New York, New York); 24 January 1899; Page 6
  25. ^ edgar-degas.org; Portrait of Jerome Ottoz by Edgar Degas (1876)
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Palm, Matt. "Forgotten in attic, discovered by chance, paintings now shine at Orlando Museum of Art". Orlando Sentinel. Tribune Publishing (26 March 2019). Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  27. ^ a b c d Mulford, Hansen (2019). Louis Dewis: A Belgian Post-Impressionist. Orlando, Florida: Orlando Museum of Art. p. 3.
  28. ^ Maison Dewachter Liège 1891 letterhead
  29. ^ Maison Dewachter Bordeaux 1904 letterhead
  30. ^ 1908 Maison Dewachter invoice identifying Louis as "successor"
  31. ^ Maison Dewachter advertising materials at Delcampe.net
  32. ^ Google Arts and Culture; The Belgian Press During the First World War
  33. ^ Le XXe Siecle (Brussels, Belgium); 22 July 1916
  34. ^ Information on the Public Garden from Bordeaux Tourism & Conventions
  35. ^ La Petite Gironde; 11 June 1918
  36. ^ Ève: le premier quotidien illustré de la femme (Paris, France); 17 April 1920 – Note: This was marked 1919 in Dewis' scrapbook, but according to the French National Library, Eve did not start publishing until February 1920. Galerie Marguy hosted major exhibitions of the era and was located at 11 rue de Maubeuge.
  37. ^ Many Artworks Saved from the German Shells; Winston-Salem Journal (Winston-Salem, North Carolina); 24 July 1915; Page 8
  38. ^ Wikimonde article on Olivier Salazar-Ferrer, great-grandson of Henri Dommartin (in French) Henri Dommartin was the son of Jean d'Ardenne, pseudonym of Léon Dommartin (1839-1919), author of literary chronicles and travel stories, defender of Baudelaire in the Belgian press, editor of the daily La Chronique, art critic and pioneer in protecting Belgian landscapes against industrialization and urbanization at the end of 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries.
  39. ^ a b Mulford, Hansen (2019). Louis Dewis: A Belgian Post-Impressionist. Orlando, Florida: Orlando Museum of Art. p. 6.
  40. ^ Catalogue Note by Henry Dommartin; Brussels, Belgium; February–March 1924
  41. ^ Jensen, Robert; Marketing Modernism in Fin-de-Siecle Europe; 1994
  42. ^ Dumas, Anne; The Private Collection of Edgar Degas, Volume 1; Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, NY); Page 309
  43. ^ a b Mulford, Hansen (2019). Louis Dewis: A Belgian Post-Impressionist. Orlando, Florida: Orlando Museum of Art. p. 4.
  44. ^ Revue moderne des arts et de la vie (Paris, France); 15 July 1921; Page 11
  45. ^ Het Laatste Nieuws (The Latest News) (Brussels, Belgium); 4 November 1929
  46. ^ Het Volk (The People) (Ghent, Belgium); 10 November 1929
  47. ^ a b Le Rappel (Paris, France); 2 June 1902; Page 3
  48. ^ Revue de la presse (Geneva, Switzerland); 15 February 1917; Page 18
  49. ^ La France de Bordeaux et du Sud-Ouest; 11 August 1914; Page 2 – the newspaper reported that the award was made to the manager of that city's Dewachter department store – "Isidore Dewachter" – but as Isidore Dewachter the father died in 1908, it had to be referring to the younger Isidore Louis Dewachter
  50. ^ Journal officiel de la République française. Lois et décrets; 8 January 1932; Page 8429
  51. ^ Journal officiel de la République française. Lois et décrets; 10 November 1912; Pages 9513-9514
  52. ^ La Petite Gironde, 28 April 1922; Page 2
  53. ^ a b c d Sud-Ouest (Bordeaux, France); 14 December 1946
  54. ^ "Cimetière de la Chartreuse". eventseeker.
  55. ^ Archiwebture: Niermans, Jean (1897–1989) and Edouard (1904–1984) and the agency of the Brothers Niermans (in French)
  56. ^ Archiwebture: Niermans, Edouard-Jean (1859-1928) (in French)
  57. ^ "Montlaur: An Historic Castle in Languedoc".
  58. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 September 2017. Retrieved 8 March 2007.
  59. ^ YouTube Video of "Dewis Rediscovered" Exhibition at Portsmouth, Virginia in 1998
  60. ^ "Linda McGreevy on WorldCat.org".
  61. ^ a b Catalogue for Encore: Dewis Rediscovered (2002), Courthouse Galleries, Portsmouth, Virginia
  62. ^ "OMA PRESENTS: LOUIS DEWIS: A BELGIAN POST-IMPRESSIONIST". Orlando Museum of Art.
  63. ^ "LOUIS DEWIS: A BELGIAN POST-IMPRESSIONIST". Orlando Museum of Art.
  64. ^ "ORLANDO MUSEUM OF ART ANNOUNCES ITS 2018-2019 SEASON". Orlando Museum of Art.
  65. ^ Mulford, Hansen. "LOUIS DEWIS: A BELGIAN POST-IMPRESSIONIST". Orlando Museum of Art. Orlando Museum of Art. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
  66. ^ Lemerond, Stephanie; Witness of Change: 8 Weeks of Discovery on the St. James’s Way; Authorhouse; 2015

louis, dewis, 1872, 1946, pseudonym, belgian, post, impressionist, painter, louis, dewachter, also, innovative, highly, successful, businessman, helped, organize, managed, first, department, store, chain, bornisidore, louis, dewachter, 1872, november, 1872, le. Louis Dewis 1872 1946 1 was the pseudonym of Belgian Post Impressionist painter Louis DeWachter 1 who was also an innovative and highly successful businessman He helped organize and managed the first department store chain Louis DewisBornIsidore Louis DeWachter 1872 11 01 1 November 1872 1 Leuze BelgiumDied5 December 1946 1946 12 05 aged 74 1 Biarritz FranceKnown forPaintingNotable workL innondation 1920 Port of Villefranche 1930AwardsLegion d honneurChevalier Knight 1914 amp 1932 France Grande Medaille de la Reconnaissance francaise France Officier d AcademieSilver Palms 1912 France Officier de l Instruction PubliqueGolden Palms 1922 France Laureat du Salon des Artistes Francais France Medaille de la Societe d Instruction et d Education Populaire France Order of Leopold IIKnight Belgium King Albert Medal Belgium 2 Order of GlorySan f al Talet Officer Tunisia 1 Patron s Georges Petit Contents 1 Early life 2 Family 3 Life as an artist delayed success in business immediate 3 1 Sunday painter 4 First exhibitions 5 Georges Petit the opportunity of a lifetime turns to disaster 6 Painting for himself 7 Between the World Wars 7 1 International recognition 8 Final years at Biarritz 8 1 Contemporary assessment of his career 9 A legacy in hibernation 10 Dewis rediscovered 10 1 Historical perspective 10 2 Orlando Museum of Art 11 Gallery 12 Sources 13 ReferencesEarly life EditHe was born Isidore Louis DeWachter in Leuze Belgium 1 3 the eldest son among the seven children of Isidore Louis DeWachter and Eloise Desmaret DeWachter 4 The father went by Isidore while the future Dewis was called Louis The name DeWachter has Flemish roots however Louis DeWachter always considered himself a Walloon 1 Isidore and his two brothers Benjamin and Modeste originated the idea of the chain department store when they formed Maisons Dewachter Houses of Dewachter in 1868 5 which they formally incorporated as the Belgian firm Dewachter freres Dewachter Brothers on 1 January 1875 6 For business purposes they had decided not to use the capital W in the family name and because the chain became so famous published references to the family would also be spelled Dewachter By the time of Dewis s death the family had adopted the spelling Dewachter as well 1 Maisons Dewachter introduced the idea of ready made or ready to fit clothing for men and children and specialty clothing such as riding apparel and beachwear 6 7 Isidore owned 51 of the company while his brothers split the remaining 49 6 They started with four locations the Walloon city of Leuze where Louis was born La Louviere and two at Mons 5 6 Under Isidore s and later Louis leadership Maisons Dewachter would become one of the most recognized names in Belgium and France 8 Soon after the company was formed Isidore and his family moved to Liege to open another branch 7 It was in that industrial city that Louis established a lifelong friendship 9 with Richard Heintz fr Richard Heintz 1871 1929 10 who also became an internationally known landscape artist Heintz is considered the outstanding representative of the Liege school of landscape painting 11 12 a movement that greatly influenced Dewis s early work When Louis was 14 the family moved to Bordeaux France where Isidore established what would be the chain s flagship store 3 7 Louis who had begun his studies at the Athenee Royal Liege continued lycee high school at Bordeaux 3 For the rest of his life he would remain an etranger a Belgian citizen living in France 13 Family Edit Maison Dewachter and family residence above 36 Rue de St Catherine Bordeaux 2006 photo Maison Dewachter Bordeaux s appearance as depicted on its 1904 letterhead Maison Dewachter promotional post card showing a Dewachter sign at the entrance of Bordeaux s Public Garden 1907 Louis DeWachter married Bordeaux socialite Elisabeth Marie Florigni 12 August 1873 25 August 1952 on July 16 1896 7 Elisabeth was the daughter of Joseph Jules Florigni 14 1842 14 April 1919 and Rose Lesfargues Florigni 14 1843 11 September 1917 There was a feeling among some members of the Florigni family which traced its roots back to the court of Catherine de Medici 15 that Babeth had married down 7 Jules Florigni administered the Bordeaux regional newspapers the Girond and La Petite Gironde 16 17 and was Chevalier de la Legion d Honneur Knight of the French Legion of Honor 18 Elisabeth s brother Robert 1881 1945 15 authored some 30 popular novels several stage plays and at least ten screen plays 19 He was also a Paris based 20 journalist on the staff of La Petite Gironde and like his father Robert Florigni was named Chevalier de la Legion d Honneur 21 In 1919 Dewis s older daughter Yvonne Elisabeth Marie was a student at the University of Bordeaux where she met and after a whirlwind courtship married Bradbury Robinson 1884 1949 a graduate student from America He was a widowed army officer a combat veteran of the Great War and a medical doctor who after being discharged in the United States had returned to France to continue his studies 15 The couple would travel around Western Europe as Dr Robinson oversaw immigrant screening for the U S Public Health Service 7 15 In 1906 Robinson had gained fame in the United States for having thrown the first forward pass in an American football game 22 The couple moved to the United States in 1926 They had seven children together and Yvonne also gained a stepson from her husband s first marriage his first wife having died in 1914 15 In her memoirs Yvonne remembers that in the early years of Dewis s career her mother regarded her father s painting with benign indifference She writes that Elisabeth DeWachter was pleased with her husband s choice of hobbies in one sense telling her friends at least it s not noisy 7 As the years passed Elisabeth took more interest It was she who maintained Dewis s scrapbook of critical reviews for three decades 13 His younger daughter and only other child Andree Marguerite Elisabeth 24 September 1903 in Rouen France 7 11 May 2002 in Paris married businessman Charles Jerome Ottoz 1903 1993 in 1925 7 who proved to be less than supportive of his talented father in law 13 Ottoz had his own connections to the art world He was the namesake of his grandfather Jerome 1819 1885 23 the well known Paris color merchant and art collector especially of Corots who loved to show his paintings to visitors at his shop on the rue Pigalle 24 Ottoz s grandfather was also the subject of the famous portrait painted in 1876 by Edgar Degas 25 A serious student of art Andree was passionate in her admiration of her father s work As Yvonne lived in the States during the last 20 years of Dewis s life Andree was the artist s only child to witness the most important years of his career She was so emotionally involved in his painting that one day Dewis wondered aloud whether his daughter would have loved him as much if I d been a grocer Years later Andree tearfully recalled assuring her father that she would 13 Life as an artist delayed success in business immediate EditYoung Louis had displayed an interest and astonishing talent in art at the age of 8 but Isidore was enraged at the thought that his offspring might waste his time with something as useless as painting In a vain attempt to break his young son of his bad habit he would on occasion throw away or burn the boy s canvases paints and brushes 3 26 The youngster s love of art could not be deterred It could however be overwhelmed by business and family responsibilities 27 As the eldest son Louis was expected to take over the family business This was a duty that his father would not allow him to shirk and which made Louis dream of life as an artist impossible 27 Father and son however apparently made a good team They doubled the number of cities and towns served by Maison Dewachter from 10 to 20 in Louis first dozen years with the firm Some cities had multiple stores such as Bordeaux which had three 28 29 For more than a decade it was Louis job to move from one place to another in France to open new stores which would then be run by one cousin or another 7 By 1908 Louis was back in Bordeaux managing the flagship Grand Magasin Department Store He assumed ultimate responsibility for 15 of the Maisons Dewachter 7 30 The reluctant merchant found a creative outlet as an active and innovative marketer He ran ads in newspapers distributed illustrated catalogues placed advertising on billboards and on trolleys and published several series of promotional postal cards Some of the cards featured famous art others humorous cartoons and another series bore images of Maison Dewachter signage that had been temporarily erected at well known locations 31 In addition to the management of an international chain of department stores Louis was forced to assume an additional burden when a brother lost a small fortune gambling With his father too infirm to deal with the situation it once again fell to the oldest son to do his duty and settle the enormous debt Louis had no choice but to borrow the sum from a very rich relation something that humiliated him to his core So as a matter of honor he insisted on repaying the loan with 100 interest over the protests of the lender and everyone else in the family As a result the task took Louis several years 27 These responsibilities and World War I combined to condemn him to what was a frustrating life as a merchant however successful until after his father s death and the conclusion of the war 27 Sunday painter Edit Throughout his business career Louis DeWachter maintained an atelier in his home and was essentially a Sunday painter 7 His few surviving early works dating from 1885 into the early 1900s were unsigned because his father refused to allow him to sully the family name by associating it with such a frivolous undertaking 7 In about 1916 Dewachter signed his first work with the pseudonym Louis Dewis pronounced Lew WEE Dew WEES His nom d artiste Dewis is composed of the first three letters of his last name followed by the first two letters of his first name Isidore As a wealthy merchant his interest in art was not financially motivated His daughter Yvonne wrote that while living in Bordeaux he turned down at least one offer of sponsorship an offer conditioned on him giving up the tailoring business Father told him the hopeful sponsor to mind his own business that he would take care of his family the way he wanted to and nobody was going to tell him what to do Well maybe he felt free the rest of his life but real artistic success was never his No doubt he was a great artist and had recognition in a certain arty circle but he could have been as famous as Utrillo or Picasso l ike everything else it is a matter of publicity 7 And Yvonne recalled that the young Dewis made real artistic success even more difficult to achieve Another handicap was that he hated to part with any of his paintings I remember as a girl when anyone came to his studio and wanted to buy something he always found some kind of excuse for not selling 7 First exhibitions EditDewis began to focus on his art about 1916 which motivated him to adopt the pseudonym Dewis He was 43 years old 3 In the summer of that year Dewis staged what was probably his first exhibition at the Imberti Galleries in Bordeaux news of which reached across the trenches that divided France in the midst of World War I to his native Belgium Le Vingtieme Siecle The Twentieth Century was clandestinely publishing a one page edition in German occupied Brussels 32 The paper somehow obtained a review of Dewis s exhibition for its 22 July 1916 issue It was placed at the top of the page and titled Our artists in France It expressed sentiments that critics would echo for the next thirty years S ome singing landscapes attract the eye The brush soaked in the matutinal coolness or in the blue mist of the windrow has more freedom and lightness It emerges from the cliche This is how he must paint with no other care than to allow his soul to vibrate like a bird in the light The skies are like ours changing full of music The subtle movement of the waters seduces the artist and it renders their undulating countenances a thousand reflections 33 In 1917 as part of Dewis s considerable efforts to aid his Belgian countrymen for which he was honored by both Belgium and France he helped organize Le Salon franco belge in the Bordeaux Public Garden 3 34 It was a charity event for the benefit of Belgian war refugees sponsored by the Belgian Benevolent Society of the South West and the Girondin Artists This event was the first of a series of exhibitions in which the art of Louis Dewis would draw serious attention from some prominent art critics of the era Louis Dewis embodies the Flemish spirit in love with colorings that are warm and harmonious He treats tenderly the humble motifs reinforcing the simplicity of their soberly translated soul But he also adores the sumptuous symphonies in which the greens the reds and the golds sing as he lets himself be charmed by the veil of a mist 35 The painter Louis Dewis has just made a small exhibition of his works at the Galerie Marguy Paris which has obtained the greatest and most legitimate success This excellent painter whose talent asserts itself at each new exhibition this time gives us landscapes quite crowned with success We must mention in particular The Reapers a very luminous work The Canal at Bruges of a character well interpreted St Jean de Luz which shines with the sun of the South The Stone Bridge at Rouen etc but we should mention them all 36 The noted Belgian art and literary critic Henry Dommartin sometimes spelled Henri met Dewis at the 1917 exhibition and became a fervent admirer of his fellow countryman s work 9 He once served as the State Librarian at Brussels and had heroically engineered the rescue of truckloads of Belgian art treasures from what was almost certain destruction shortly after the Germans occupied Belgium in 1914 37 Dommartin was the first and most insistent among Dewis s circle of friends to argue that the artist should concentrate solely on his art 13 38 From this period until his death in Biarritz in 1946 Dewis s landscapes were shown regularly at major exhibitions across western Europe 26 They attracted favorable reviews in the international press purchases from major museums and the highest decorations from the governments of three countries However the highest achievement of fame eluded him True Dewis had finally escaped the dictates of his overbearing father that had stymied his career for almost three decades He was now free to focus on painting He could spend more time in the studio in his family s large apartment at 36 40 Rue de St Catherine over the Maison Dewachter in Bordeaux But his career would be marked by uncommon public relations misfortune 4 As daughter Andree bilingual like her sister would say in English many years later Dad had hard luck 13 Georges Petit the opportunity of a lifetime turns to disaster Edit Georges Petit The renowned and influential French art dealer Georges Petit was impressed by the Belgian s work at the 1917 exhibition in Bordeaux 39 His initial reaction as he once told Dewis was vous etes un tendre you are tender hearted 40 The support of the owner of Galerie Georges Petit could be life changing According to Emile Zola who knew the Parisian art world inside and out Petit was the apotheosis of dealers when the Impressionist market soared and competition among marchands became intense 41 Petit had attained the highest degree of success and influence in his profession His historic Expositions internationales de Peinture had featured works by Claude Monet Camille Pissarro Pierre Auguste Renoir Auguste Rodin John Singer Sargent Alfred Sisley and James McNeill Whistler and he conducted the sales of the works of Degas after that artist s death in 1917 42 He pressured Dewis scolding him that he was wasting his life selling clothes 43 Petit urged him to sell his interest in Maison Dewachter and move to Paris telling him come paint for me in Paris and I will make you famous 43 Finally Dewis relented He sold his majority interest in Dewachter freres and relocated his family from Bordeaux to Paris in May 1919 39 But only a year later Georges Petit was dead at the age of 64 Dewis was on his own and he was no self promoter 13 Painting for himself EditIn turning his career over to Petit Dewis had taken the biggest risk of his life and lost He found himself in Paris without a sponsor He of course still had resources from the sale of his business So the former merchant rented an atelier 13 and began painting for public exhibition From the beginning his work was highly regarded and well reviewed as this 1921 appraisal by the art critic at Paris Revue moderne des arts et de la vie Modern Review of the Arts and Life attests Few landscape artists in my opinion among our modern painters reach such a profound expression of truth in a finer art form This artist knows admirably how to compose his paintings while maintaining a note of reality which removes any impression of being formulaic Modern clearly by the richness of the palette by the skillful distribution of color and light by the creation of this true atmosphere so rarely achieved it nevertheless continues the high tradition of the old masters by the consciousness of drawing respect for perspective and harmony of composition And all these elements combine to create real life on the canvas palpitating with the intimate emotion of the artist before nature 44 Despite such praise Dewis s work was never heavily promoted 13 He had realized that Petit s legendary prowess as a marchand d art art dealer was the perfect complement to his own talents But now involuntarily and totally independent Dewis simply did not have the drive nor the desire to achieve commercial success 13 And at this juncture of his life Dewis was to encounter another antagonist 26 His son in law Jerome Ottoz was also a recipient of the Chevalier de la Legion d Honneur recognition for his accomplishments in business He resented his talented and gallingly more famous beau pere father in law Jerome possessed a demeanor reminiscent of Isidore s and as such dominated the timid artist at one point talking Dewis out of accepting a lucrative offer of sponsorship by another Parisian art dealer 13 Eventually Dewis reconciled himself to his fate And happily so He was perfectly content painting what he wanted to paint and not producing what was in fashion or what art promoters thought would sell 13 He was free to experiment with different techniques as daughter Yvonne recalled He tried the impressionist style and the pointille and the heavy brush stroke improving every time but always his coloring regardless of his method was gorgeous His skies were breathtaking and his water flowing on and on carrying you along in a dream 7 He told his family I paint as the bird sings for the pure joy of expressing his emotions 13 Between the World Wars EditDewis exhibited throughout France and Belgium in the 1920s and 30s as well as in Germany Switzerland and what were at the time the French colonies of Algeria and Tunisia Collectors and museums from Europe South America and Japan purchased his work 3 Critics commented on the maturation of his art such as in this 1929 review by Brussel s Het Laatste Nieuws The superb works that the painter Louis Dewis has just hung in our theater deserve the deepest interest Although Dewis has long been established in France he is still able to communicate admirably that special and intimate feeling that is found in many corners of Flanders and Wallonia recreating them with the enthusiasm of his artistic soul yet faithful and true The art of Louis Dewis appears in the magnificent maturity of a learned and profound spirit of observation put at the service of a firm technique devoid of any indication of contrivances in pursuit of effects Everything proves that among our Belgian artists Dewis does not occupy a secondary position 45 The Flemish critic at Het Volk also remarked on the sincerity of Dewis s work after visiting the same exhibition No clutter no affected detail but rather works of broad design and which in powerful touches express the emotions and aspirations of the artist 46 Unlike the younger painter of Bordeaux described by his daughter Yvonne in Paris Dewis devoted nearly all of his time to painting in his atelier at 28 rue Chaptal or sketching at locations across France and Belgium He was prolific selling hundreds of paintings in his career 13 International recognition Edit Although he concentrated on his art only in the last 30 years of his life he was already well known in France and Belgium and beyond for his high profile in the clothing industry and for his civic and charitable activities which he began in the 1890s when he was still in his 20s 47 He served as the president of an organization in the South of France that worked in the interests of the suffering population of Belgium and refugees from that country during the Great War He gained international attention for publicly urging the French government to treat Belgians with less suspicion as potential German collaborators and more compassion 48 His efforts on behalf of his Belgian countrymen were recognized by the French Republic with the Grande Medaille de la Reconnaissance francaise Grand Medal of French Gratitude France named him a Chevalier de la Legion d Honneur for his accomplishments in business in 1914 49 and again as a Chevalier in 1932 for more than 30 years of artistic practice 50 He was named an Officier d Academie Silver Palms in 1912 when he was still painting as an amateur 51 and he was named Officier de l Instruction Publique Golden Palms in 1922 three years after relocating to Paris 52 He also received the Medaille de la Societe d Instruction et d Education Populaire Medal of the Society of Instruction and Public Education 47 Belgium awarded him the King Albert Medal and named him a Knight of the Order of Leopold II 3 Tunisia made him an Officer of the Order of Glory 3 His art was included in multiple Salons taking a prize in 1930 and it received the high honor of being chosen for Paris Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne 1937 3 53 What critics judged to be one of his most beautiful canvases Vue de Bruges View of Bruges was purchased by the French Republic for the Palace of the League of Nations in Geneva Switzerland 53 Dewis was a Laureat of the Societe des Artistes Francais an associate member of the Societe Nationale des Beaux Arts a founding member of the Salon des Tuileries and of the Societe des peintres du Paris moderne and of the Societe royale des beaux arts of Belgium among others 3 53 Final years at Biarritz EditDewis and his family fled Paris for the South West shortly before the Nazi occupation of 1940 initially staying with relatives in Bayonne 13 By great good fortune in this time of war they heard of a villa that was becoming available in Biarritz An American was heading back to the United States and selling a large house with lovely gardens that he had named for his wife Villa Pat The family purchased the home and it was here that Dewis would paint for the last seven years of his life 13 Biarritz wasn t far from Bordeaux where Dewis had lived from the age of 14 to his marriage and from 1908 1919 He was once again inspired by the countryside of the Pays Basque Since travel was greatly limited during the occupation Dewis often found his subjects within his own garden in nearby parks and along the Atlantic coast Contemporary assessment of his career Edit Louis Dewis died of cancer at Villa Pat 13 in late 1946 Bordeaux s Sud Ouest newspaper successor to La Petite Gironde which had been administered decades earlier by his maternal grandfather published its lamentations under the headline A Painter Is No Longer With Us A great painter has just passed away in Biarritz Louis Dewis The man was as good as the painter for whom Biarritz Bayonne and the Basque Coast quite often manifested a sincere admiration since he retired to the resort Through his acclaimed talent he brought something new to this region for which as well as for the painting his death is a great sorrow 53 The critic at the Journal of Biarritz had no trouble finding the word that he felt best described Dewis If we have to characterize Dewis s talent in a word we could say that he was one of the most sincere landscape painters of modern times Behind the big strokes which he was particularly fond of a quivering emotion can always be felt since Dewis painted with his heart as much as his brushes 3 He was buried in the family tomb at Bordeaux s Cimetiere de la Chartreuse fr 54 A legacy in hibernation EditDewis s devoted daughter Andree had returned to live in her Paris co propriete condominium after the war ended Except for the period of occupation the flat in the 17th arrondissement of Paris was her home from 1935 until her death in 2002 13 The spacious apartment just a few blocks from the Parc Monceau occupied the entire top floor of a 19th century building Andree had made many extended visits to Biarritz during her father s illness 13 After he died she was intent on preserving everything related to his artistic career She carefully crated up the entire contents of his atelier at Villa Pat 26 Since she would be staying with her widowed mother in Biarritz for a while she shipped the crates to Paris for safekeeping in the temporary custody of two trusted nephews 13 the noted architects Edouard Niermans 1903 1984 and Jean Niermans 1897 1989 Officier de la Legion d Honneur fr Jean Niermans 55 Their father Edouard Jean Niermans fr Edouard Jean Niermans 1859 1928 56 celebrated as the architect of the Cafe Society and Chevalier de la Legion d Honneur married Dewis s sister Louise Marie Heloise DeWachter 1871 1963 in 1895 Dewis was very close to Louise 13 and in her home the artist socialized with the likes of Auguste Renoir and Jules Cheret 57 Eventually the boxes would be transferred to the attic of Andree s co propriete 26 and placed in a locked room that was originally designed as maid s quarters There the sturdy wooden boxes would sit untouched for nearly 50 years 26 Dewis rediscovered EditDewis s art had survived and blossomed despite the opposition of his father the devastating loss of Petit an antagonistic son in law and two world wars 1 But now it was all locked away and collecting dust Jerome had absolutely no interest in any effort to construct a legacy for his deceased rival 13 As the years passed Andree had all but given up hope that her beloved father might be remembered 13 By the mid 1990s Jerome was dead Through a chance conversation with a visiting great nephew from the States 26 a grandson of her sister Yvonne the then 92 year old Andree and the young American opened the crates and immediately resolved to return Dewis s work to the public 4 The more than 400 paintings and hundreds of sketches 26 that they found were catalogued Experts were retained to evaluate the vast collection and what were judged to be the most outstanding pieces were cleaned and properly framed for public exhibition The effort culminated in the exhibition Dewis Rediscovered at the Courthouse Galleries 1 58 in Portsmouth Virginia in 1998 It was the first public showing of Dewis s art in more than half a century 59 Historical perspective Edit Dr Linda McGreevy wrote essays for the catalogues for the first two Dewis exhibits in America 1 McGreevy who was a Professor of Art History and Criticism and the Chair of the Art Department at Old Dominion University in Norfolk Virginia is an expert in French art between the two world wars 1 60 She described how Dewis s art was rediscovered in the attic of the Paris flat of Dewis DeWachter s daughter On the walls of the apartment in which she d lived for over fifty years were works not only by her father but by Jean Baptiste Camille Corot 23 During the course of this visit and others over the next several months Andree recalled that there were probably more of her father s work stored in the attic though she figured they d probably all rotted away inasmuch as they d been there since his death in 1946 What they found were crates that while caked in dust the paintings themselves were in remarkably good condition And stored in the ceiling were still more rolled canvases numerous sketchbooks journals even his palette 4 Louis Dewis was hardly an unknown artist in his time but then again he was no Monet or Degas either both of whom he knew intimately Louis Dewis s work resembles most closely that of Corot who was his strongest influence except that it tends to borrow from the Impressionists a more resplendent use of color Dewis painted mostly landscapes those of the Belgian towns and countryside he knew all his life But by the end of WW II the popular art styles of the time had not only changed drastically but the art world he d known had fled Paris entirely When he died it was as if he took his life s work with him except for less than a dozen examples in family hands in this country and the few on the walls of his daughter s apartment in Paris However thanks to the perseverance of Dewis s American great grandson and the Portsmouth Art Museum the work of Louis Dewis and perhaps his spirit too have returned from the dead 4 The Belgian ambassador to the United States Alex Reyn was an honored guest at Dewis Rediscovered after which he requested that three Dewis paintings be lent for permanent exhibition in his country s embassy in Washington DC 26 Personally making the selections he chose Snow in the Ardennes as the only painting to be displayed in the anteroom to the ambassador s office 1 In the catalogue for 2002 s Encore Dewis Rediscovered Professor McGreevy observed that art history has worked against Dewis s inclusion in what she described as the modernist pantheon which was continuing to relegate artists solely concerned with landscape to a lower echelon following a hierarchy of subject matter established in the 17th century It s only in the last decade that the history of art in mid War France has been reevaluated and expanded in scope This is significant for Dewis since his most productive period spanned those two decades 61 Now he seems poised like so many others to claim a place in modernism s broader trajectory His contributions to the French version of Regionalism his luminous paintings from the pristine reaches of Frances arriere pays back country alongside the Corot inspired images of his native Belgium recovering slowly from the war s ravages may well receive the recognition their creator deserved long ago 61 Since their rediscovery in 1996 more than 100 of Dewis s paintings found in his daughter s attic have been cleaned and framed and are lent to museums for the public to enjoy 1 26 Orlando Museum of Art Edit On 1 May 2018 the Orlando Museum of Art OMA announced that it may become the permanent home of the rediscovered collection of Dewis paintings and related materials 62 OMA staged a mini exhibition of Dewis works beginning in May 2018 63 and a full exhibit of more than 100 Dewis paintings in January 2019 26 64 In the catalogue for that exhibition OMA Senior Curator Hansen Mulford provided this perspective While his earliest works were influenced by Impressionism he quickly developed a personal style of expressive realism in line with this mainstream in French art of the 1920s and 30s His paintings of regional locales throughout France featured views that were idealized and imbued with a sense of place Dewis s works draw upon classical models of French landscape painting such as those of Camille Corot His compositions are balanced and orderly following the conventions of depicting deep space through a recession of forms and aerial perspective Broad planes of color define the topography land water sky and architecture while bold diagonal elements like roads and rivers draw the eye into the scene His brushwork is often quick and direct rendering forms clearly without excessive detail Though his style is anchored in a historic tradition the simplicity of his best work is wholly modern and aligned with his contemporaries While descriptive detail enriches all of Dewis s paintings he rarely painted directly from life Instead he worked from drawings which allowed him to edit and distill the expressive elements of each scene Observed impressions were important but memory was essential to his practice allowing him the distance to find his own order in each composition About this he said it is this memory that transmuted by my sensitivity gives to my works life and this truth that you love to find there While Dewis was a realist he was also interested in creating emotional resonance with his painting that did not require excessive detail saying I never seek a slavish copy of nature This is the fundamental thought of the art of Corot Cazin Cezanne Van Gogh Gauguin and which the latter expresses through the aphorism In painting there is suggestion rather than description 9 OMA opened another exhibit of Dewis s work on September 24 2020 which continued through May 1 2022 65 Gallery Edit The Old Beggar Bordeaux France 1916 shown at Le Salon franco belge in 1917 where Dewis s work was first seen by Georges Petit Dyle Bridge at Mechelen Belgium c 1919 Notre Dame 1919 Valley in the Belgian Ardennes c 1920 Andree the Little Fisherwoman 1922 Morning Landscape 1926 The Village Road Auvergne c 1929 Port of Villefranche honored at the 1930 Salon 3 Self Portrait c 1940 The Garden at Villa Pat 1940 Bridge at Saint Jean Pied de Port 1940 66 Snow in Biarritz 1942 The Village Church 1945Sources EditCatalogues for Dewis Rediscovered 1998 and Encore Dewis Rediscovered 2002 Courthouse Galleries Portsmouth Virginia L avenir de la Dordogne Perigueux France 5 January 1918 La Petite Gironde Bordeaux France 11 June 1918 Memoirs of Yvonne DeWachter Robinson Young Transcribed interviews with Andree DeWachter Ottoz 1995 2001 LouisDewis com YouTube Video of Dewis Rediscovered Exhibition at Portsmouth Virginia in 1998References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louis Dewis a b c d e f g h i j k l m n LouisDewis com Medaille du Roi Albert a b c d e f g h i j k l m A Great Artist Disappears Journal de Biarritz Biarritz France 17 December 1946 a b c d e Catalogue for Dewis Rediscovered 1998 Courthouse Galleries Portsmouth Virginia a b Le Pantheon de L Industrie Paris France 1891 Page 20 a b c d Annexes to the Belgian Monitor of 1875 Acts Extracts of Acts Minutes and Documents relating to Corporations Book 3 Page 67 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Memoirs of Yvonne DeWachter Robinson Young written in English Dewachter stores were still operating in 2019 The stores in Montpelier were still using the Dewachter trade name but had no apparent connection to the founding family The 1895 founding date promoted on the 2019 website may have been the date the Montpelier Maison Dewachter location originally opened a b c Mulford Hansen 2019 Louis Dewis A Belgian Post Impressionist Orlando Florida Orlando Museum of Art p 5 Wallonie en Ligne on Richard Heintz in French Liege school of landscape painting website Richard Heintz at the Liege school of landscape painting website a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Transcribed interviews with Andree DeWachter Ottoz 1995 2001 a b Annuaire du tout Sud Ouest illustre comprenant les grandes familles et les notabilites de Bordeaux et des departements 1907 1908 Page 382 a b c d e Michigan Centennial History Volume 5 pages 109 to 111 1939 Bouchon Georges and Gounouilhou Gustave Histoire d une imprimerie bordelaise 1600 1900 les imprimeries G Gounouilhou La Gironde La petite Gironde 1 January 1901 Pages 511 and 602 Journal officiel de la Republique francaise Paris France 15 November 1908 Page 7750 Annuaire de la presse francaise et etrangere et du monde politique Paris France 1909 edition Director Paul Bluysen Page 280 Canjels Rudmer Distributing Silent Film Serials Local Practices Changing Forms Cultural Transformation Routledge 2011 Page 197 In 1921 Robert Florigni adapted the screen plays for 10 episodes of the 15 episode film serial The Sky Ranger George B Seitz Productions for Pathe Exchange Azais Jean Alphonse Annuaire international des lettres et des arts de langue ou de culture franc aise M Jean Azais 1921 Page 121 Pierre Robert Florigni lived at 19 boulevard Montmarte in Paris 2nd Arrondissement French Wikipedia Robert Florigni Nelson David The Anatomy of a Game Football the Rules and the Men Who Made the Game University of Delaware Press 1994 Page 129 a b Wikimedia Commons page for Ottoz family tomb at Cimetiere du Pere Lachaise in Paris Note Andree Ottoz s husband Jerome probably inherited the Corots in their residence from his grandfather s collection Dewis cited Corot as an inspiration to his own work The Sun New York New York 24 January 1899 Page 6 edgar degas org Portrait of Jerome Ottoz by Edgar Degas 1876 a b c d e f g h i j k Palm Matt Forgotten in attic discovered by chance paintings now shine at Orlando Museum of Art Orlando Sentinel Tribune Publishing 26 March 2019 Retrieved 30 March 2019 a b c d Mulford Hansen 2019 Louis Dewis A Belgian Post Impressionist Orlando Florida Orlando Museum of Art p 3 Maison Dewachter Liege 1891 letterhead Maison Dewachter Bordeaux 1904 letterhead 1908 Maison Dewachter invoice identifying Louis as successor Maison Dewachter advertising materials at Delcampe net Google Arts and Culture The Belgian Press During the First World War Le XXe Siecle Brussels Belgium 22 July 1916 Information on the Public Garden from Bordeaux Tourism amp Conventions La Petite Gironde 11 June 1918 Eve le premier quotidien illustre de la femme Paris France 17 April 1920 Note This was marked 1919 in Dewis scrapbook but according to the French National Library Eve did not start publishing until February 1920 Galerie Marguy hosted major exhibitions of the era and was located at 11 rue de Maubeuge Many Artworks Saved from the German Shells Winston Salem Journal Winston Salem North Carolina 24 July 1915 Page 8 Wikimonde article on Olivier Salazar Ferrer great grandson of Henri Dommartin in French Henri Dommartin was the son of Jean d Ardenne pseudonym of Leon Dommartin 1839 1919 author of literary chronicles and travel stories defender of Baudelaire in the Belgian press editor of the daily La Chronique art critic and pioneer in protecting Belgian landscapes against industrialization and urbanization at the end of 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries a b Mulford Hansen 2019 Louis Dewis A Belgian Post Impressionist Orlando Florida Orlando Museum of Art p 6 Catalogue Note by Henry Dommartin Brussels Belgium February March 1924 Jensen Robert Marketing Modernism in Fin de Siecle Europe 1994 Dumas Anne The Private Collection of Edgar Degas Volume 1 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York NY Page 309 a b Mulford Hansen 2019 Louis Dewis A Belgian Post Impressionist Orlando Florida Orlando Museum of Art p 4 Revue moderne des arts et de la vie Paris France 15 July 1921 Page 11 Het Laatste Nieuws The Latest News Brussels Belgium 4 November 1929 Het Volk The People Ghent Belgium 10 November 1929 a b Le Rappel Paris France 2 June 1902 Page 3 Revue de la presse Geneva Switzerland 15 February 1917 Page 18 La France de Bordeaux et du Sud Ouest 11 August 1914 Page 2 the newspaper reported that the award was made to the manager of that city s Dewachter department store Isidore Dewachter but as Isidore Dewachter the father died in 1908 it had to be referring to the younger Isidore Louis Dewachter Journal officiel de la Republique francaise Lois et decrets 8 January 1932 Page 8429 Journal officiel de la Republique francaise Lois et decrets 10 November 1912 Pages 9513 9514 La Petite Gironde 28 April 1922 Page 2 a b c d Sud Ouest Bordeaux France 14 December 1946 Cimetiere de la Chartreuse eventseeker Archiwebture Niermans Jean 1897 1989 and Edouard 1904 1984 and the agency of the Brothers Niermans in French Archiwebture Niermans Edouard Jean 1859 1928 in French Montlaur An Historic Castle in Languedoc Courthouse Galleries Website Portsmouth Virginia Archived from the original on 23 September 2017 Retrieved 8 March 2007 YouTube Video of Dewis Rediscovered Exhibition at Portsmouth Virginia in 1998 Linda McGreevy on WorldCat org a b Catalogue for Encore Dewis Rediscovered 2002 Courthouse Galleries Portsmouth Virginia OMA PRESENTS LOUIS DEWIS A BELGIAN POST IMPRESSIONIST Orlando Museum of Art LOUIS DEWIS A BELGIAN POST IMPRESSIONIST Orlando Museum of Art ORLANDO MUSEUM OF ART ANNOUNCES ITS 2018 2019 SEASON Orlando Museum of Art Mulford Hansen LOUIS DEWIS A BELGIAN POST IMPRESSIONIST Orlando Museum of Art Orlando Museum of Art Retrieved 4 October 2020 Lemerond Stephanie Witness of Change 8 Weeks of Discovery on the St James s Way Authorhouse 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louis Dewis amp oldid 1152717557, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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