Robert Savary (1920-2000) - La Seine





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Robert Savary, La Seine, lithograph on vellum paper, 67 by 82 cm, hand-signed, limited edition, France, 1980s, in good condition.
Description from the seller
Robert Savary (1920-2000) - The Seine
Original lithograph on vellum paper measuring 67 x 82 cm.
The work is numbered and signed in pencil at the bottom right.
Work in good condition, never framed. Tear along the upper border repaired.
We provide meticulous packaging, international tracking, insurance, and express shipping for all our deliveries.
Biography: Robert Savary was a French painter and printmaker, born on April 20, 1920 in Paris, and died on May 28, 2000 in Petit-Quevilly.
A figurative artist, Savary was part of the New School of Paris. He was a pupil of Maurice Brianchon at the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts de Paris, and he won the Casa de Velázquez prize in 1948.
He won the Prix de Rome in painting in 1950. He taught from 1957 at the École régionale des beaux-arts de Rouen (of which he became honorary director) while living in Paris and spending his summers in Collioure. He was named Painter of the Navy in 1987. He counted René Aberlenc, Paul Collomb and Paul Guiramand among his close friends.
For more than forty years, he was part of the group of exhibitors invited by Maurice Boitel to the Salon Comparaisons in Paris.
Seller's Story
Robert Savary (1920-2000) - The Seine
Original lithograph on vellum paper measuring 67 x 82 cm.
The work is numbered and signed in pencil at the bottom right.
Work in good condition, never framed. Tear along the upper border repaired.
We provide meticulous packaging, international tracking, insurance, and express shipping for all our deliveries.
Biography: Robert Savary was a French painter and printmaker, born on April 20, 1920 in Paris, and died on May 28, 2000 in Petit-Quevilly.
A figurative artist, Savary was part of the New School of Paris. He was a pupil of Maurice Brianchon at the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts de Paris, and he won the Casa de Velázquez prize in 1948.
He won the Prix de Rome in painting in 1950. He taught from 1957 at the École régionale des beaux-arts de Rouen (of which he became honorary director) while living in Paris and spending his summers in Collioure. He was named Painter of the Navy in 1987. He counted René Aberlenc, Paul Collomb and Paul Guiramand among his close friends.
For more than forty years, he was part of the group of exhibitors invited by Maurice Boitel to the Salon Comparaisons in Paris.

