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Biography
Claude Viallat was born in Nîmes in 1936. He grew up in Aubais,
a French village with a strong bull tradition.
In 1955, he joined the “École des Beaux-Arts” (the
Fine Arts School) of Montpellier, where he met André-Pierre Arnal,
Vincent Bioulès, Daniel Dezeuze, Toni Grand, François Rouan,
and Henriette Pous, whom he married in 1962.
After doing his military service in Algeria from 1958 to 1961, he joined
the “École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts”
(the National Fine Arts School) of Paris, where he met fellow students
Joël Kermarrec, Pierre Buraglio, and Michel Parmentier. He discovered
American art in Paris, notably the works of Kenneth Noland, Morris Louis,
Sam Francis, and Mark Rothko. As soon as 1963, he was attracted to abstraction.
He was appointed as a teacher in the “École des Arts Décoratifs”
(the Decorative Arts School) of Nice in 1964 and decided to create a new
formal language questioning the conventions of classical painting. He
then started working systematically with one shape affixed on canvas without
stretchers. His first personal exhibition took place at Nice’s “Galerie
A” (A Gallery) in 1966. He also participated in several collective
exhibitions that year.
In 1967, he was appointed as a teacher in the “École des
Beaux-Arts” (the Fine Arts School) of Limoges, where he met Raoul
Hausmann. In 1968, in Paris, Viallat had his first personal exhibition
at the gallery led by Jean Fournier – who remained his gallerist
for nearly thirty years.
He then participated in an exhibition that arguably originated the “Support/Surfaces”
movement at the ARC, in the Modern Art Museum of Paris. His works were
in most of the exhibitions of the movement from 1969 to 1971. Although
he initiated this group and influenced it aesthetically through his pictorial
works, he resigned on May 3, 1971 as he disagreed with the political and
theoretical orientations imposed by Louis Cane and Marc Devade.
In 1972, during his first trip to the United States, he discovered Jackson
Pollock’s paintings and the art of Native Americans. The same year,
he participated in the “Amsterdam-Düsseldorf-Paris” exhibition
at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum of New York, and the “Douze
Ans d'Art Contemporain en France” exhibition (Twelve Years of Contemporary
Art in France) at the “Grand Palais” in Paris.
In 1973, he was appointed as a teacher in the “École des
Beaux-Arts” (the Fine Arts School) of Luminy, and moved to Marseille.
In 1974, the first ever Viallat exhibition in a museum was organised in
Saint-Étienne’s “Musée d'Art et d'Industrie”
(the Museum of Art and Industry).
In 1979, Claude Viallat became director of the “École des
Beaux-Arts” (the Fine Arts School) of Nîmes. He started collecting
objects related to bulls. His collection was the starting point of the
“Musée des Cultures Taurines” (the Museum of Bull Tradition)
of Nîmes, opened in 1986.
The “Centre National d'Art et de Culture George Pompidou”
(the National Modern Art Museum of Paris) hosted a Viallat retrospective
in 1982.
He represented France at the Venice Biennial in 1988. The same year, he
made the stained-glass windows of the Gothic Choir in Nevers Cathedral.
In 1991, he became a teacher at the “École Nationale Supérieure
des Beaux-Arts” (the National Fine Arts School) of Paris and participated
in the Supports/Surfaces historical and retrospective exhibition at the
Musée d’Art Moderne (the Modern Art Museum) of Saint-Étienne.
In 2006, he was awarded with the Fine Arts Academy’s Prize of Painting
of the “Fondation Simone et Cino del Duca” (the Simone and
Cino Del Duca Foundation).
Painting: a tremor, an inner uncertainty, a commitment to change, to
infringe, to subvert knowledge and consciousness.
You cannot find the strength anywhere but in innocence, in carefreeness,
in spontaneity.
Working without wanting, without knowing, just using the mechanism of
gestures, and the unexpected surpassing of oneself.
Being fragile, porous, undecided, and troubled. Keeping a half-awake half-asleep
eye, hanging to a running dream. Becoming the hand that acts without any
control of the will or desire.
Claude Viallat
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