Daniel Fauville (Belgium)
Original lithograph, signed by the artist and numbered 142 (out of 150). Paper dimensions: 50 × 40 cm. Unframed.
Daniel Fauville, born in 1953 in Charleroi, Belgium, is a distinguished painter, sculptor, and pastellist. He pursued studies in graphic and advertising arts at the IATA in Namur, furthered his education in plastic arts at the ICET in Charleroi, and honed his skills in silkscreen printing and engraving at the Academy of Fine Arts in Charleroi.
Fauville's oeuvre is deeply influenced by Belgium's industrial heritage, particularly the technological structures of steelworks and coal mines that once dominated the landscape. Through metaphors, he assimilates these structures to religious sculptures, depicting mausoleums in states of abandonment, with broken columns, open exits, and eroded flying buttresses. His work has garnered international recognition, with pieces acquired by the French Ministry of Culture.Fauville has participated in numerous Belgian and international group exhibitions, including representing Belgium at the 20th São Paulo Biennial in 1989 alongside artists like Pierre Alechinsky, Gabriel Belgeonne, and Marc Trivier, as well as at the first Dakar Biennale.
In addition to his artistic practice, Fauville has contributed to the academic field as a visual arts teacher at a college of higher education in Brussels. His works are featured in both private and public collections worldwide, reflecting his unique style that transcends regionalism, characterized by essential strokes and the use of shapes that are both familiar and imaginary.
Original lithograph, signed by the artist and numbered 142 (out of 150). Paper dimensions: 50 × 40 cm. Unframed.
Daniel Fauville, born in 1953 in Charleroi, Belgium, is a distinguished painter, sculptor, and pastellist. He pursued studies in graphic and advertising arts at the IATA in Namur, furthered his education in plastic arts at the ICET in Charleroi, and honed his skills in silkscreen printing and engraving at the Academy of Fine Arts in Charleroi.
Fauville's oeuvre is deeply influenced by Belgium's industrial heritage, particularly the technological structures of steelworks and coal mines that once dominated the landscape. Through metaphors, he assimilates these structures to religious sculptures, depicting mausoleums in states of abandonment, with broken columns, open exits, and eroded flying buttresses. His work has garnered international recognition, with pieces acquired by the French Ministry of Culture.Fauville has participated in numerous Belgian and international group exhibitions, including representing Belgium at the 20th São Paulo Biennial in 1989 alongside artists like Pierre Alechinsky, Gabriel Belgeonne, and Marc Trivier, as well as at the first Dakar Biennale.
In addition to his artistic practice, Fauville has contributed to the academic field as a visual arts teacher at a college of higher education in Brussels. His works are featured in both private and public collections worldwide, reflecting his unique style that transcends regionalism, characterized by essential strokes and the use of shapes that are both familiar and imaginary.
Original lithograph, signed by the artist and numbered 142 (out of 150). Paper dimensions: 50 × 40 cm. Unframed.
Daniel Fauville, born in 1953 in Charleroi, Belgium, is a distinguished painter, sculptor, and pastellist. He pursued studies in graphic and advertising arts at the IATA in Namur, furthered his education in plastic arts at the ICET in Charleroi, and honed his skills in silkscreen printing and engraving at the Academy of Fine Arts in Charleroi.
Fauville's oeuvre is deeply influenced by Belgium's industrial heritage, particularly the technological structures of steelworks and coal mines that once dominated the landscape. Through metaphors, he assimilates these structures to religious sculptures, depicting mausoleums in states of abandonment, with broken columns, open exits, and eroded flying buttresses. His work has garnered international recognition, with pieces acquired by the French Ministry of Culture.Fauville has participated in numerous Belgian and international group exhibitions, including representing Belgium at the 20th São Paulo Biennial in 1989 alongside artists like Pierre Alechinsky, Gabriel Belgeonne, and Marc Trivier, as well as at the first Dakar Biennale.
In addition to his artistic practice, Fauville has contributed to the academic field as a visual arts teacher at a college of higher education in Brussels. His works are featured in both private and public collections worldwide, reflecting his unique style that transcends regionalism, characterized by essential strokes and the use of shapes that are both familiar and imaginary.
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