Sunday, February 21, 2021

CHENOUA PAINTED BY MARIUS DE BUZON

https://wanderingvertexes.blogspot.com/2021/02/chenoua-painted-by-marius-de-buzon.html

MARIUS DE BUZON (1879-1958)
Chenoua (905 m- 2969 ft)
Algeria

In La Côte d'Alger aux Environs de Tipiza, oil on canvas, 1951, Private collection


The mountain
The Chenoua (905 m- 2969ft) in Berber: Adrar n Cenwa) is a mountain located in the region of Tipaza, in the north of Algeria. The massif of Mount Chenoua is, in the west, the highest point of the hills of the Algiers Sahel. It is surrounded to the east by Wadi Nador, Tipaza river and to the west by Wadi El Hachem, Cherchell river. By joining the sea, the Chenoua forms an alternation of cliffs and beaches, visible from the panoramic road that runs along the Mediterranean. The Chenoua corniche, which stretches as far as Cherchell (Caesarea), is home to small picturesque beaches. Cape Chenoua or Ras el Amouch offers a view of the bay and a walk in the caves of the cliff. Marble is taken from the Chenoua quarries. The novels by Albert Camus : "La mort heureuse"  and "Noces " are partly set in  the Chenoua.

The painter
Marius de Buzon is a French painter of the school of Algiers of Spanish ancestry, descendant of Francisco de Goya. In 1939, the well known french journalist and writer Max-Pol Fouchet said about him in Algeria : "The praise of M. de Buzon seems to me useless to do. We know the serious and powerful art of this painter, but he also knows how to release on his canvases a Corotian tenderness before such a French landscape. He moves only more." While according to Victor Barrucand, "he highlighted the essential lines of the landscapes, sculpting large swathes of the Kabyles valleys " .
He is knighted by the Legion of Honor.
He is considered, and quoted, as the "cantor of Kabylie" and one of the founders of the School of Algiers (following Maxime Noiré, and with Léon Carré, Léon Cauvy, Paul Jouve). He also paints landscapes and types of the region of Bougie, the Mzab (where he is one of the first painters to enter, after Étienne Dinet, with Maurice Bouviolle, Touggourt where he regularly stays after 1945 (L'Heure Blonde, 1950), Témacine (1953), and Sidi Bou Saïd, or Spain and Morocco, Casablanca, Rabat or Fez.
His works are highly sought after by collectors as representing scenes of Kabyle life, landscapes, pastoral scenes; "He substitutes for the notion of ethnic identification, that infinitely more poetic allegory " wrote Élisabeth Cazenave, while in 1930 Pierre Angel : "Marius de Buzon continued on these African shores the ancient dreams of the pagan mysticism. "
Marius de Buzon died at the end of November 1958 in Algiers; his son Jean and grandson Jean-Frédéric were murdered in 1962 while trying to move and save the workshop of their father and grandfather.

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2021 - Wandering Vertexes...
by Francis Rousseau


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