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Chaim Soutine’s identity was never integral to his art, even as a Jew whose death Nazis caused. Artists in Gaza, Syria and Ukraine share his universality.
As paint and painters go, few ever reached as deep as Chaim Soutine (1893–1943) and Willem de Kooning (1904–1997).
Chaim Soutine, Carcass of Beef, c. 1925. Oil on canvas. Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York While the pictures will knock you out without any back story, the biography tells you something ...
“Chaim Soutine: Flesh,” which consists of 31 canvases, is organized in four sections: “A Modern Still Life” — home of the artichoke and fish — “Fowl,” “Flesh” and “The Life ...
Photo: Louisiana Museum of Modern Art Humlebaek, Denmark In 1910, Chaïm Soutine (1893-1943), in the shtetl of Smilavičy, in present-day Belarus, asked a fellow villager to pose for a portrait.
Author Steve Stern views Chaim Soutine as an artist who didn’t deny his Judaism, and resented those who he saw as exploiting it, like Marc Chagall. Courtesy of Melville House ...
Soutine had a long-standing obsession with meat, which emerged, he said, from seeing a goose beheaded as a child (the happiness on the butcher’s face made him stifle his scream).
Installation view of the exhibition Chaim Soutine: Flesh, May 4–September 16, 2018, at the Jewish Museum (photo courtesy the Jewish Museum, New York) More info at the Jewish Museum.
A 1921 portrait of an unidentified man with a red scarf by Chaim Soutine (1893-1943) sold for $17.2 million at Sotheby's London auction house Monday, a record for works by the Lithuanian-born ...
We'll find out tonight, when Christie's auctions off Chaim Soutine's "Le Petit Patissier" for an estimated $16-$20 million By Sam Dean May 8, 2013 ...
Last week at Sotheby’s auction house in London, the hammer fell on the former Hammer Soutine. In a sale topped by the Edouard Manet ‘Self-portrait’ once owned by Las Vegas casino and resort ...
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