Biography from Axelle Fine Arts Boston:
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André Bourrié was born in Montpellier, France in 1936. His parents died when he was only eight years old. He first lived with an uncle, and then was sent to a small orphanage in Paris, where he had more opportunities to draw. There he earned a degree as a ceramist. This trade allowed him to express more of his creative talents, to have conversations about color and art, to confront new ideas and styles, and left enough time to concentrate on his paintings. He was promoted director of an atelier and then asked to teach a course.
Throughout this time, his desire to fully dedicate his life to painting was very strong. Following the success of his first solo exhibition of paintings in 1966 at the age of 30, he was able to leave his vocation as a molder and retired in 1979 to become a full time artist.
Bourrié is best known for his impressionist seascapes and landscapes of France. His work can be found in private and public collections in the United States, Europe and Japan. He is a member of the Salons d’Automne and Salons des Artistes Français as well as the Official Painter of the French Navy.
In 1996 Bourrié was named an Official Artist of the 1996 Centennial Olympic Games and commissioned to paint a work of Savannah, Georgia. His painting Passage à Savannah became the Official Poster of the Games. Information obtained from interviews with the artist and Axelle Fine Arts Limited Edition Collection Volume VII, 2001 Submitted by Virginia Lockwood, Axelle Fine Arts Boston |
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