Corneille (1922-2010) - Incantation






Spent five years as a Classic Art Expert and three years as a commissaire-priseur.
Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 130932 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Incantation by Guillaume Corneille is a limited edition lithograph from 1991 in the Cobra style, measuring 50 by 65 cm, signed by the artist in white pencil and in very good condition.
Description from the seller
Artist's exemplar - A rare and uncommon work
Painter of joy, Guillaume Corneille delivers a message of peace and serenity through the white dove.
Large original lithograph by the painter Guillaume Corneille (1922-2010), born in Liège to Dutch parents, founding member of the Cobra movement.
Overall dimensions: 50 x 65 cm
Signed and dated in white pencil by the artist himself
Very good condition with minor color spots on the back.
Great Master of color in the wake of Gauguin and Matisse, Guillaume Corneille creates a jovial world imbued with exoticism. A traveling artist, Corneille, thanks to his friend Alan Davie, crosses paths with David Hockney on the London scene. Both are erudite painters; they share a taste for color, a knack for simplifying the line, and the same tendency to wink at the history of art from previous centuries as well as at their own history.
Seller's Story
Artist's exemplar - A rare and uncommon work
Painter of joy, Guillaume Corneille delivers a message of peace and serenity through the white dove.
Large original lithograph by the painter Guillaume Corneille (1922-2010), born in Liège to Dutch parents, founding member of the Cobra movement.
Overall dimensions: 50 x 65 cm
Signed and dated in white pencil by the artist himself
Very good condition with minor color spots on the back.
Great Master of color in the wake of Gauguin and Matisse, Guillaume Corneille creates a jovial world imbued with exoticism. A traveling artist, Corneille, thanks to his friend Alan Davie, crosses paths with David Hockney on the London scene. Both are erudite painters; they share a taste for color, a knack for simplifying the line, and the same tendency to wink at the history of art from previous centuries as well as at their own history.
