Painters [*/ ) Flowers | Paintings by Auguste Herbin, 1904-1911

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Auguste Herbin, Self-portrait, 1906                                                                            Auguste Herbin, Les trois vases, 1904
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Auguste Herbin, Azalées, 1905
still life with lamp 1905
Auguste Herbin, Still Life with Lamp, 1905
flowers 1906
Auguste Herbin, Flowers, 1906
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  Auguste Herbin, Nature morte à la cuvette, 1909                     Auguste Herbin, Arum Lilies, 1911
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Auguste Herbin, Nature morte aux fleurs, 1910

It was in 1908, soon after moving into the Bateau-Lavoir and taking up the adjacent studio to that of Picasso, that Auguste Herbin first adopted the principles of Cubism. In contrast to the approach of Georges Braque or indeed that of Juan Gris, Herbin was quick to reject the dogma of achromia and its strict vocabulary, preferring instead to focus on the purification and simplification of volume, the pairing of geometric forms and vibrant colors. The innovative paintings executed by Herbin between 1908 and 1912 earned him the respect and recognition of the greatest collectors of the period, including Léonce Rosenberg, Wilhelm Uhde and even Alfred Flechtheim, who all purchased work directly from the artist’s studio. (…)

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Auguste Herbin, Composition au bouquet, 1909           Auguste Herbin (French, 1882-1960), Still LIfe, n/d
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The painter Auguste Herbin in Picasso’s atelier (11 Bld. de Clichy), ca 1911
by Pablo Picasso

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