A national tribute to Pierre Soulages will be paid Wednesday at the Louvre

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The ceremony will take place at 3 p.m. in the Cour Carrée du Louvre in the presence of Emmanuel Macron and will be open to the public.

A national tribute to the painter Pierre Soulages will be paid on Wednesday in the square courtyard of the Louvre, a week after his death at the age of 102, the Elysée announced on Saturday.

Emmanuel Macron will preside over the ceremony which is due to start at 3:00 p.m. and will be open to the public, in the presence of members of the government and the family of the artist known worldwide in the world of painting for his paintings in infinite shades of black.

Born on December 24, 1919 in Rodez in an artisan environment that fed his imagination, Pierre Soulages, who became a world celebrity in French painting, died Tuesday evening of heart failure.

Recognition of cultural institutions

Fascinated by prehistory from an early age, the artist had worked a great deal with walnut stain before continuing with his large black flat areas of oil paint, which he scraped, scratched and modeled almost in the thickness of the painting, bringing out shades of red, blue and unexpected transparencies.

He had fallen into what he called “outrenoir” in 1979, when he was painting on a work entirely covered in thick black, streaked by chance.

Tall, always dressed in black, Soulages had acquired a real worldwide reputation thanks to his large canvases in a thousand shades of black. He said he was trying to “bring out the light”.

For more than 75 years, he tirelessly traced his path, attracting the recognition of cultural institutions and the art market which made him one of the most highly rated French artists during his lifetime.

Already a tribute to the Louvre in 2019

One of his 1961 paintings sold for $20.2 million in New York in November 2021. The painting titled Painting 162×130 cm, May 2, 1963 sold on Wednesday for almost 6 million euros, Sotheby’s announced in the evening.

He had already had the honors of a tribute to the Louvre in 2019, at the dawn of his 100th birthday. Until then, only Picasso and Chagall had had this privilege during their lifetime.

After his death, the Parisian institution hailed on its Twitter account a “companion to the museum for more than 50 years”.

“Pierre Soulages had known how to reinvent black, by making light spring from it. Beyond black, his works are vivid metaphors from which each of us draws hope”, reacted Emmanuel Macro

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