Olynthe Madrigali (1887 - 1950) - Saint-Tropez






Graduated as French auctioneer and worked in Sotheby’s Paris valuation department.
Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 127342 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Saint-Tropez, Post-Impressionism, oil painting from France by Olynthe Madrigali (1887–1950), a landscape, 22 × 39 cm.
Description from the seller
Olynthe MADRIGALI (1887 - 1950)
Saint-Tropez
Oil on panel
Dimensions of the painting: 17 x 34 cm
Signed at the bottom left.
Painting in perfect condition.
Beautiful new gilded frame. Offered.
Original work delivered with invoice and certificate of authenticity.
Fast, careful and insured shipping.
Buy with confidence !
Olynthe Madrigali, born in 1887, carried within him the light of the Mediterranean as others carry an inheritance. Trained with Paul Saïn but guided mainly by his own eye, he shaped a painting where the sea, the ports and sun-soaked villages become almost confidences.
After the trials of the Great War, his second wind came in Algeria, observing Algiers from the quays where he worked, capturing on his canvases the changing blues, the white facades and the shadows sliding over the city.
Curious traveler, he pushes as far as Syria, then always returns to Corsica, his homeland, which he paints with grave tenderness.
Madrigali passed away in 1950, leaving behind a discreet but vibrant body of work, like a travel notebook where each landscape tells a fragment of his life.
Seller's Story
Olynthe MADRIGALI (1887 - 1950)
Saint-Tropez
Oil on panel
Dimensions of the painting: 17 x 34 cm
Signed at the bottom left.
Painting in perfect condition.
Beautiful new gilded frame. Offered.
Original work delivered with invoice and certificate of authenticity.
Fast, careful and insured shipping.
Buy with confidence !
Olynthe Madrigali, born in 1887, carried within him the light of the Mediterranean as others carry an inheritance. Trained with Paul Saïn but guided mainly by his own eye, he shaped a painting where the sea, the ports and sun-soaked villages become almost confidences.
After the trials of the Great War, his second wind came in Algeria, observing Algiers from the quays where he worked, capturing on his canvases the changing blues, the white facades and the shadows sliding over the city.
Curious traveler, he pushes as far as Syria, then always returns to Corsica, his homeland, which he paints with grave tenderness.
Madrigali passed away in 1950, leaving behind a discreet but vibrant body of work, like a travel notebook where each landscape tells a fragment of his life.
