ORLANDO, FLA.- More than a hundred works of the distinguished Belgian Post-Impressionist Louis Dewis, lost to the world for over 50 years, are being featured in Dewiss first major museum exhibition beginning January 25th at the
Orlando Museum of Art. Discovered by chance in the Paris attic of Dewiss daughter by his American great-grandson, Mr. Brad Face, they were among thousands of the artists paintings, studies and sketches that had been stored there since his death in 1946. After this discovery, Mr. Face resolved to return his ancestors work to the public and find a home for the collection.
Art critics of the early 20th century European art world noted Dewiss unusual ability to communicate his emotions through his work, commented OMA Director and CEO Glen Gentele. And that certainly has been what weve seen with our Dewis mini-exhibition (presented May 18 - September 9, 2018). This remarkable collection of Dewiss work and the fascinating story of his life are not to be missed continued Gentele.
Louis Dewis (1872-1946) was born Louis Dewachter in Leuze, Belgium. He developed an interest in art early in life but was discouraged from pursuing a career as a painter by his father. As a young man he entered the family business, Maison Dewachter, the worlds first department store chain. A successful and innovative entrepreneur, Dewis dedicated himself to growing the business while privately devoting time to his artistic development. He later adopted the pseudonym Louis Dewis to comply with his fathers insistence not to associate the family name with the younger Dewachters frivolous pastime as a painter.
Following the death of his father, Dewiss painting career began to take precedence over the family business. Living in Bordeaux at the time, he had his first public exhibitions there and was active in the citys artistic life. At one of these exhibitions, he was discovered by the Paris art dealer Georges Petit. Petit was a leading dealer of the period representing at times such masters as Monet, Renoir and Rodin. Petit offered to represent Dewis, if he would move to Paris and devote himself to painting. In 1919, Dewis took Petits advice, selling his share of the department stores and moving to the French capital.
Though Petit died a year later, Dewis went on to establish a successful career for the next two and a half decades. Dewis exhibited throughout France and Belgium in the 1920s and 30s, as well as in Germany and Switzerland. When the Second World War began, Dewis left Paris and settled in Biarritz on Frances Southern Atlantic coast. For the last few years of his life, the scenic coastal city and surrounding rugged countryside became the subject of his paintings.
Louis Dewis: A Belgian Post-Impressionist will present landscapes from important periods of the artists career following World War I. The years immediately after the Great War were distinctive in French art for a return to the motif of landscape, which is reflected in the direction that Dewis pursued. In part a response to the unprecedented devastation of the country and staggering loss of life, many artists during this time sought to celebrate the soil of France in landscape painting. Working in the towns, villages and open countryside throughout France, these artists strove to depict the unique and varied regions that together comprised the cultural vitality of the nation.
Following his death in 1946, Dewiss daughter, Andrée Dewachter Ottoz, was intent on preserving everything related to his artistic career. She had the entire contents of his atelier in Biarritz packed and shipped to her Paris home. For over 50 years much of Dewiss work languished in storage and his career was overlooked by the art world of Post War France. Finally, through a chance conversation with her great-nephew, Mr. Face, the then 92-year-old Mme. Ottoz revealed the cache of paintings she had stored away for decades. Inspired by this astonishing discovery of the lifes work of a once prominent artist and family member, Mr. Face undertook the major commitment of caring for the collection and renewing public interest in Dewiss career. With this exhibition, the Orlando Museum of Art is delighted to be a part of Dewiss extraordinary story.