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About Bernard Buffet
A painterly alchemist with an enigmatic mega-celebrity, Bernard Buffet skyrocketed to artistic celebrity when, at eighteen, he showed his first painting at the Galerie des Beaux-Arts, followed by his inclusion in the Musée National d’Art Moderne the next year. The public clamored for his resolutely figurative works, and by many he was perceived to be the next great artist to follow in the succession of world-famous Pablo Picasso.
Yet in the decades that followed, Buffet was publicly shunned and ridiculed by influential art world figures, including Picasso, in France, where he was seen to be over-producing his commercial artwork. In the 1990s, he received a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease, which eventually rendered him unable to work and the year 1999 saw Buffet create his final series of works – an example of which is included in Sotheby’s exhibition – completed and displayed together before his suicide that year.
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