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Michel
Delacroix is truly a French original: an acclaimed master of the naïf
tradition and one of the most popular and successful artists in the world
today. A self-styled "painter of dreams and of the poetic past,"
Delacroix has devoted five decades to painting a city he calls "the
Paris of then," the magical place where he was born, where he spent
his boyhood, and where he continues to live to this day.
But the Paris Delacroix paints is
not the urban metropolis of the present. It is the dream-like place the
city became in the 1940s, during the Occupation, when "we suddenly
jumped fifty years into the past. No more cars in the streets, very few
lights. Paris suddenly became very quiet, very dark, and, though people
were afraid, there was a brotherhood and spirit that was very delightful.
"For Delacroix, who was then a child of seven and spared by his age
from grasping "the cruelties and absurdities" of war, it was
"the one great adventure of my live."
And it is to this special Paris -
the Paris of by-gone years and innocent splendors that Delacroix has
returned to over and over again in his gentle works. These works, renowned
for their graceful balance of "the earthy and the urban, the cosmic
and the ordinary," have captivated private collectors, museums and
ordinary people alike throughout the world, earning the artist both
universal acclaim and numerous awards.
In the U.S. alone, Delacroix's
work has been featured in over 275 one-person shows, from New York City,
Boston, and Washington, D.C., to Los Angeles, Carmel, Denver, Seattle, and
San Francisco. Abroad, his work has been exhibited in France, Switzerland,
Germany, Luxembourg, England, and Japan, and forms part of the permanent
collections of the Musee International d'Art Naïf and the Foundation Max
Fournay in Paris, and of private collections around the globe.
In 1995, Michel Delacroix was
named an Official Artist of the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Ganges
and commissioned to celebrate the 1996 Games in an oil painting. Titled
Atlanta 1886-1996, Delacroix's stunning work was used to create an
Official Poster for the 1996 Games and a special Limited Edition. In 1994,
Delacroix was also honored by the U.S. Olympic Committee, which selected
him to serve as an Official Artist and commissioned him to mark the
one-hundredth anniversary of the modern Olympic Games in a painting. The
resulting work, 1896 Olympics, was itself used to create an
Official Poster and a beautiful Limited Edition. In 1995, Delacroix also
became the Official Artist of the 1995 Special Olympics World Games. His
magnificent Sport. Spirit.
Splendor:,
which was commissioned for the occasion, became the Official Poster for
the 1995 Games and a Limited Edition.
The Official Posters and Limited
Editions of Delacroix's Olympic works were published by Axelie Fine Arts,
Delacroix's exclusive publisher, in association with Fine Art Ltd., a
licensee of the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games. |



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