Victor Pierre Huguet, French, 1835 - 1902
AT THE WADI
Oil on canvas
115 by 147cm., 45 by 58¾in.
Private collection
Wadi is the Arabic term referring to a valley, ravine, or channel that is dry except in the rainy season.
Victor Pierre Huguet, born Lude the 1 st May
1835 and died in Paris August 16, 1902, was a French,
landscape and genre painter.. He was a pupil of Emile Loubon in Marseille and
received advice from Fromentin in Paris.
In 1852,
aged 17, he traveled to Egypt, then to Crimea where he accompanied
Durand-Brager before the siege of Sebastopol. He was profoundly influenced
by the landscapes he passes through and that will influence his inspiration to
Orientalism, where he soon made a name. Discovering Algeria a few years
later, he drew from many sources of inspiration.
He exhibited at the Salons de Marseille and Paris in 1859
and the Salon of French Orientalist Painters at its inception in 1893. He
was the leading Orientalist artists of Provence. More Victor
Pierre Huguet
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