Date: Fri 09-Oct-1998
Date: Fri 09-Oct-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: JUDYC
Quick Words:
Guilleux
Full Text:
Herve Guilleux Paintings
w/2 cuts
KENT, CONN. -- The Paris-New York-Kent Gallery is opening a new exhibition in
the caboose on October 10.
It was in 1995, walking in a maze of unknown French artists in an underground
exhibition organized by the artists themselves, that Jacques Kaplan, the owner
of the gallery, and his wife, Violaine Bachelier, stopped, amazed, in front of
a small stand with four very large extraordinary paintings -- black and white
with je ne sais quoi of yellow and brown. They were Van Gogh kind of subjects:
a shabby interior, weird country and cityscapes, an extraordinary portrait of
a super wrinkled woman.
The style, the subject matter were so amazing that, without even consulting
one another, they immediately bought one painting, walked some 50 yards
further, looked at each other and went back to Herve Guilleux. Five months
later he had his very first gallery exhibition at the Paris-New York-Gallery.
The first show sold out. In 1996 the second exhibition sold on the opening
day, and in 1997, what was expected to be his last show in Kent, the whole
exhibition was sold before the art was even hanging on the walls.
There will be a reception for the 1998 show at the gallery, 3 to 5 pm on
October 10. The show will run through November 8. The gallery, in the Kent
Station Square, is open Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 11 am to 5 pm, and by
appointment. For further information, 860/927-4152.
