| Philippe
Noyer (1917 - )
Philippe Noyer was born June 28, 1917 in
Lyon (central France). After a traditional course of study at
the elite Ecole des Roches, Noyer enrolled in the Beaux Arts
(Fine Arts) School of Lyon, before going to Paris to study at
the Paul Colin School of Art and experience the whirlwinds of
Surrealism first hand on Paris' Left Bank.
Philippe Noyer started his painting career in 1943. That same
year he met the famous Paris art dealer, Emmanuel David, who
promoted world-known "School of Paris" painters from
1943 - 1950. David immediately put Noyer on contract with the
prestigious DROUANT-DAVID Gallery of Paris. Parallel to his
paintings, which at the time, represented owls wrapped in leaves
and round-faced urchins with their pet animals, Philippe Noyer
soon became one of the most sought after portraitist of Paris
and London high society. The Gallery gave him his first one-man
show in 1947, which immediately crowned him with instant success.
Life was good.
While he was with the DROUANT-DAVID Gallery, Philippe Noyer
says his stroke of luck for his success in the United States
can be attributed to Mr. Robert Goldstein, the former President
of the 20th Century Fox movie company. It was in 1949. The Gallery
gave twenty of Philippe Noyer's paintings on consignment to
an American art dealer who had agreed to organize an exhibition
of them in the United States. The American dealer, however,
was a heavy gambler and one night, before the show, he suffered
unprecedented losses and was forced to sell off the paintings
without a profit. The buyer turned out to be Robert Goldstein
who was so pleased with his purchase that he distributed the
art to his friends, including the legendary Samuel Goldwyn,
who, in turn, made Philippe Noyer's name known on the West Coast.
A deep and long lasting friendship between Noyer and Goldstein
ensued. In 1960 when, like it happens to all artists, Philippe
Noyer was in a difficult financial situation, Goldstein jetted
Philippe from Paris to London and organized an auction at which
all of Noyer's current paintings were sold to Goldstein's friends.
In those following years, Philippe was commissioned to paint
the portraits of dozens of personalities including Elizabeth
Taylor, Dinah Shore, Jean Wallace and the children of actor
Alan Ladd and producer Alan Lerner. As his art matured, however,
he put aside this career as a portraitist to devote himself
entirely to the delicate, sophisticated, slim, long-limbed ladies
who had progressively replaced children as his favorite subjects.
"My paintings are what they appear to be, nothing more,
nothing less," Philippe Noyer once told a critic. "Some
are serious, some are not. But I have always painted what I
have felt."
From the leaf-clad owls of his first paintings to the litho
maidens and languorous cheetahs of his later works, Philippe
Noyer's art has always remained quite unique. The elements Philippe
uses in his paintings - the women, the monuments, the animals
and the flowers - come alive under the brush which translates
them in strictly realist terms in compositions that are the
fruits of his fantasy and intellectual or literary reminiscences.
Like in the paintings of any artist, there are pet themes and
objects that recur like good luck charms - eggs, hats, shoes
- but as the artist himself warns, it would be vain to seek
in them some hidden symbolism or draw oversimplified Freudian
conclusions.
Thirteen years of careful personal research brought Philippe
Noyer to the technique which gives his paintings their very
special transparency and light. The technique, which Philippe
Noyer finished perfecting in 1956 eliminates the use of white
in favor of pure colors which give the rocks their roughness,
bring alive the subtle glow of a seashell and give the subjects'
skins a peach-like softness one can feel without touching.
Noyer's honesty with himself, his inborn draftsmanship and
eye for color have earned Philippe Noyer a worldwide reputation.
He married Nora Kern in 1939 and fathered four children: Denis
Paul, Corinne, Laurence and Ariel. Noyer died circa 1980. Currently
2,000 of his oil paintings and watercolors are in museums, collections
and private collections.
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