- Michel Kikoine
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Not to be confused with Isaak Kikoin.
Michel Kikoine Born May 31, 1892
Rechytsa, BelarusDied November 4, 1968 Nationality Belarusian Michel Kikoine (Belarusian: Міхаіл Кікоін, Russian: Михаил Кико́ин Michail Kikóin; May 31, 1892 – November 4, 1968), was a French painter of Jewish-Belarusian origin.
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Life
Kikoine was born in Rechytsa, Belarus. The son of a Jewish banker in the small southeastern town of Gomel, he was barely into his teens when he began studying at "Kruger's School of Drawing" in Minsk. There he met Chaim Soutine, with whom he would have a lifelong friendship. At age 16 he and Soutine were studying at the Fine Arts School in Vilnia and in 1911 he moved to join the growing artistic community gathering in the Montparnasse Quarter of Paris, France. This artistic community included his friend Soutine as well as fellow Belarus painter, Pinchus Kremegne who also had studied at the Fine Arts School in Vilnia.
For a time, the young artist lived at La Ruche while studying at the Ecole Nationale Superieure des Beaux Arts. In 1914, he married a young lady from Vilnia with whom he would have a daughter and a son. Their son, Jankel Jacques, born in France in 1920, also became a painter. The same year as his marriage, Kikoine volunteered to fight in the French army, serving until the end of World War I.
With the outbreak of World War II and the subsequent occupation of France by the Germans, Michel Kikoine and his Jewish family faced deportation to the Nazi death camps. Until the end of the War they stayed near Toulouse. After the Allied liberation of France, he moved back to Paris where his paintings were primarily nudes, autoportraits, and portraits. In 1958 he moved to Cannes on the Mediterranean coast where he returned to landscape painting until his passing on November 4, 1968.
Career
Michel Kikoine had his first exhibition in Paris in 1919 after which he exhibited regularly at the Salon d'Automne. His work was successful enough to provide a reasonable lifestyle for him and his family allowing them to spend summers painting landscapes in the south of France, the most notable of which is his "Paysage Cezannien," inspired by the great Paul Cézanne. He died in Cannes, France.
Influence
In 2004, at the university in Tel Aviv, Israel, a new wing in the Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, was dedicated to the memory of Michel Kikoine.
References
Categories:- Modern painters
- Jewish painters
- Belarusian painters
- Russian painters
- Russian artists
- Belarusian Jews
- People from Rechytsa
- 1892 births
- 1968 deaths
- School of Paris
- Russian painter stubs
- Belarusian people stubs
- European painter stubs
- French painter, 19th century birth stubs
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