Salon des Tuileries

The Salon des Tuileries was next to the Paris Salon, the Salon des Refusés, the Salon des Independants, and the Salon d' Automne of the most important art exhibitions in the French capital. He was also known as the Salon du Mai.

History

Operator of the exhibition was the Société founded on June 14, 1923 de Salon des Tuileries, its first president and co-founder Albert Besnard was. Other founding members were the vice president Antoine Bourdelle, Edmond Aman -Jean and Charles Despiau. The first exhibition, which was designed by the architect brothers Gustave and Auguste Perret, found in 1923 in the barracks at the former Porte Maillot in Paris. The locations of the following exhibitions changed. The salon took on representatives of various artistic movements and teachings. The works were divided according to subject groups. The exhibition in 1924 benefited from the non-participation of many artists such as Marc Chagall, Mela Muter, Alice Halicka or Zdenek François Eberl at the Salon des Independants.

Exhibited artists (selection)

  • Lucien Adrion
  • Nelli bar
  • Albert Bertalan
  • Maria Blanchard
  • Jean Egger
  • André Favory
  • Josef Floch
  • Othon Friesz
  • Tsuguharu Fujita
  • Natalija Sergejewna Goncharova
  • Adolph Gottlieb
  • Marcel Gromaire
  • Henryk Gotlib
  • Henryk Hayden
  • Georges Kars
  • Moïse Kisling
  • Roman Kramsztyk
  • Pinchus Krémègne
  • Roger de La Fresnaye
  • Mikhail Fedorovich Larionov
  • Jacques Lipchitz
  • Jan and Joël Martel
  • Pauline Peugniez
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