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Stamp by Serge Charchoune
fictional stamp
The publication of a postal stamp is often a homage paid by a nation to a place, an event, a remarkable cause or a character which count. The painters and other artists do not escape from this rule. Some are however "forgotten" of postal art. Here, gathered below (French or foreign), emitted stamps (206) or simple studies of stamp (224) in homage to the artists represented on our website. The first French stamp was emitted in 1849, England preceded us by ten years. There is often a share of voyage in this small form of shape paper. The stamp circulates, sails, flies away, it makes dream, then dream a little. M.C.
When the stamp is really emitted, the artist name is preceded of an asterisk (*).
It is certain that we do not know each stamp emitted for such or such artist; do not hesitate with us to make known them!
Discover all the stampsListen
A tribute to Serge Charchoune
Serge Charchoune, le peintre d’origine russe venu en France en 1912, s’éteint à Villeneuve-Saint Georges le 24 novembre 1975, il avait 87 ans. Il repose dans le cimetière russe de Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois (Essone, 91). En son hommage, avec respect, nous déposons une fleur, amaryllis rouge, sur sa tombe.
"Charchoune a tout inventé et c’est peut-être aussi parce que ses intuitions géniales ont été exploitées par d’autres qu’il est le plus grand de nous tous et cela il faudra bien le reconnaître un jour." - Nicolas de Staël
"Charchoune s'est laissé oublier." - André Breton
"La peinture de Charchoune est une musique toute de finesse, elle joue sur les rapports subtils de demi-tons, de quart-de-tons, elle est parfaitement invisible dans les reproductions en noir et blanc." - Nicolas de Staël
"Il est aussi difficile de disserte sur la peinture de Serge Charchoune que sur celle de Corot, …, elles présentent des caractères communs qui tiennent à une certaine analogie des deux artistes : sérénité poétique de l’œuvre, égale modestie des auteurs et même refus de sacrifier à une mode." - Maurice Allemand, conservateur du Musée de Saint-Etienne
"Charchoune, on me donne sept lignes pour vous définir. J’aimerais mieux cinq mots, je dirais : vous avez de la noblesse et cela devrait suffire pour attirer l’attention des amateurs sur ces œuvres cristallines ou chaudes, discrètes, mélodiques, sensibles et intelligentes." - Amédée Ozenfant
"L’oeuvre de Charchoune est un itinéraire dont la qualité première est l’indépendance." - Michel Guinle
Notes of biography
Serge Charchoune was born in 1888 in Bougourouslan, Russian, a small town west of the Ural mountains where he spent his childhood. Son of a fabric trader, he was an average student. Charchoune discovers painting during the strikes that shatter Russia in 1905. He wants to study art but does not pass his entry exam to the Fine Arts School of Kazan. He leaves for Moscow in 1909, he works in different Academies, meets Larionov and Gontcharova, he discovers Monet and the Impressionists.
Not wanting to do his military service, Serge Charchoune escapes to Berlin and then to Paris in 1912. He frequents the Palette Academy where he is influenced by Le Fauconnier who becomes his teacher. He meets Metzinger, who is enthusiastic by fauvism and cubism. Charchoune participates in the Salon des Independents in 1913. During the war and until 1920, the artist lives in Spain where his first solo exhibitions are held, in Barcelona in 1916 and 1917. It is in Spain that he makes pictorial discoveries that will have great importance in his art (the azureros, the arabesques, etc.). It is this period that defines his ornamental cubism with canvas covered with ideograms. The artist meets Francis Picabia and comes into contact with the Dada movement that will have a great influence on his writings.
On returning to Paris in 1920 he exhibits for the first time and participates with the Dada group; he collaborates with the revue 391 and publishes ‘Foule immobile’ in 1921. Charchoune goes to Berlin from 1922-1923 where he meets Maiakovski, Isadora Duncan and participates in some group exhibitions (Der Sturm, Zaria, etc.) collaborating with some revues. Coming back to France, he meets Ozenfant and turns towards purism; his rigorous compositions blend into the juxtaposition of his touches. The artist will spend a decade in isolation and becomes greatly discouraged in the 1930’s.
He regains his confidence when he gets a studio in 1940 and sells some of his paintings. Water and music become sources of inspiration that lead him toward abstraction; he uses less color, almost monochrome, leaning towards white, the color Charchoune considers as ‘the absolute color’. The artist now figures regularly in the great Parisian Salons. From now on numerous solo exhibitions of his work are organized in France and abroad.
Abstract artist, he succeeded in suggesting the imperceptible and the inexpressible. A posthumous homage was attributed to him in 1976 at the Museum of Modern Art in Paris. His art engages the spectator. A painter who often goes against the trend of painting austere, sober and well-balanced works.
Serge Charchoune died in Villeneuve-Saint-George in 1975. He was laid to rest in the Russian cemetery of Sainte-Genevieve-des-Bois.
Artists on display
The art and the artists display: proclamations, galleries, museums, personal or collective exhibitions. On walls or in shop windows, wise or rebels, posters warn, argue, show. Some were specially conceived by an artist for such or such event, other, colder, have only the letter.
Some were created in lithographic technic, most are simple offset reproductions. They are many those who like collecting these rectangles of paper, monochrome or in games of colours, in matt paper or brilliant, with many words or almost dumb.
We are happy also to be able to greet, by this pages, mythical galleries as those of Denise René, Louis Carré, Claude Bernard, Berheim Jeune, Maeght, Pierre Loeb and others.
Complete work(s)
Complete work(s)
*« Serge Charchoune », 2 Vol., Raymond Creuze, 1975 *« Charchoune, 1912-1924 », Vol. I du C.R., P. Guenegan, Ed. Lanwell Leed, 2006 *« Charchoune, 1925-1930 », Vol. II du C.R., P. Guenegan, Ed. Lanwell Leed, 2007 *« Charchoune, 1930-1950 », Vol. III du C.R., P. Guenegan, Ed. Lanwell Leed, 2009 *« Charchoune, 1950-1960 », Vol. IV du C.R., P. Guenegan, Ed. Lanwell Leed, 2011 *« Charchoune, 1961-1975 », Vol. V du C.R., P. Guenegan, Ed. Lanwell Leed, 2014 All the complete worksBibliographic track and more
To read about the artist :
- « Charchoune », W. Copley, W. and N. Copley Foundation, Chicago, 1962
- « Profil de Charchoune », R. Guerra, Ed. Galerie de Seine, Paris, 1973
- « Charchoune, une archéologie de l'âme », A. Bosquet, R. Guerra, Ed. Gal. de Sei
- « Charchoune », cat. D'expo., Gal. Fanny Guillon-Laffaille, Paris, 1988
- « Charchoune 1889-1975 », Burillo et autres, Ed. Vegap, Madrid, 2004
- « Entre Dada y la Abstraccion », F. C. Mapfre Vida, Madrid, 2004
- « Charchoune. La leçon de Monet », M. Guinle, Ed. Le Minotaure, 2005
- « Dada » L. Le Bon, cat., Ed. du Centre Pompidou, Paris, 2005
- « Dada libertin & libertaire », G. Lista, Ed. L'insolite, Paris, 2005
- « Charchoune, Soleil Russe », I. Ewig, cat., Gal. Thessa Herold, Paris, 2007
To read from the artist :
- « Dadaïsme », Europa Homéopathe, Berlin, s.d. (1923)
- « Dolgolikov », roman imprimé à Paris, 1961
Website :
No website dedicated to the artist.More :
Stamp by Serge Charchoune
The publication of a postal stamp is often a homage paid by a nation to a place, an event, a remarkable cause or a character which count. The painters and other artists do not escape from this rule. Some are however "forgotten" of postal art. Here, gathered below (French or foreign), emitted stamps (206) or simple studies of stamp (224) in homage to the artists represented on our website. The first French stamp was emitted in 1849, England preceded us by ten years. There is often a share of voyage in this small form of shape paper. The stamp circulates, sails, flies away, it makes dream, then dream a little. M.C.
When the stamp is really emitted, the artist name is preceded of an asterisk (*).
It is certain that we do not know each stamp emitted for such or such artist; do not hesitate with us to make known them!
Discover all the stampsListen
A tribute to Serge Charchoune
Serge Charchoune, le peintre d’origine russe venu en France en 1912, s’éteint à Villeneuve-Saint Georges le 24 novembre 1975, il avait 87 ans. Il repose dans le cimetière russe de Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois (Essone, 91). En son hommage, avec respect, nous déposons une fleur, amaryllis rouge, sur sa tombe.
"Charchoune a tout inventé et c’est peut-être aussi parce que ses intuitions géniales ont été exploitées par d’autres qu’il est le plus grand de nous tous et cela il faudra bien le reconnaître un jour." - Nicolas de Staël
"Charchoune s'est laissé oublier." - André Breton
"La peinture de Charchoune est une musique toute de finesse, elle joue sur les rapports subtils de demi-tons, de quart-de-tons, elle est parfaitement invisible dans les reproductions en noir et blanc." - Nicolas de Staël
"Il est aussi difficile de disserte sur la peinture de Serge Charchoune que sur celle de Corot, …, elles présentent des caractères communs qui tiennent à une certaine analogie des deux artistes : sérénité poétique de l’œuvre, égale modestie des auteurs et même refus de sacrifier à une mode." - Maurice Allemand, conservateur du Musée de Saint-Etienne
"Charchoune, on me donne sept lignes pour vous définir. J’aimerais mieux cinq mots, je dirais : vous avez de la noblesse et cela devrait suffire pour attirer l’attention des amateurs sur ces œuvres cristallines ou chaudes, discrètes, mélodiques, sensibles et intelligentes." - Amédée Ozenfant
"L’oeuvre de Charchoune est un itinéraire dont la qualité première est l’indépendance." - Michel Guinle
Art movements
+ DADAISM / 1916-1924 / Erwin Blumenfeld, Marcel Duchamp, Marcel Janco, Kurt Schwitters, Sophie Taueber-Arp, etc.
+ PURISM / 1920-1927 / Marcelle Cahn, Otto Gustav Carlsund, etc.
+ LYRIC ART, ABSTRACT, TACHISM / 1950-1960 / Jackson Pollock, Emil Schumacher, etc.
+ NEW REALITIES / 1946-1956 / Etienne Béothy, Marcelle Cahn, etc.
All art movements
See & discover
Beyond works currently in stock, it seemed to me useful to combine business with pleasure by letting you discover others works by artists in my gallery. These artworks, now sold or removed from our website, have been in our stock in the past.
These pages will undoubtedly make it possible for some of you to associate an image with its title or the other way round, for others it will be a good time to discover more on such and such artist. For the sake of confidentiality – the pieces being no longer available – we won't display neither their numbering or their price. For whatever reason, make sure to visit this amazing art database with to date 6441 online works just for your pleasure! Michelle Champetier