"We seldom get into trouble when we speak softly. It is only when we raise our voices that the sparks fly and tiny molehills become great mountains of contention."
A painter’s most valuable asset is his
artistic reputation. It determines how much he sells and at what
prices.
The
intelligent artist guards his reputation like the gold in Fort Knox.
He ruthlessly destroys his failures. He refuses to do things that are
against his judgment. But sometimes even the most fastidious get
trapped, as Robert Lapoujade found out.
Lapoujade
(1921-1993) was a painter’s painter and a revolutionary
filmmaker. Serious painters in Europe regarded him with reverential
admiration. Yet they do not imitate. He painted people, fables,
landscapes, and battles, but his images were reflected in a thousand
broken mirrors.
In
a brilliant, long essay written about the painter, Nobel prizewinner
Jean Paul Sartre declared Lapoujade the most important painter of our
day. Such a reputation is an incalculable asset.
Robert Lapoujade, Portrait of Jean Paul Sartre
(This
essay was the most difficult thing I ever tried to translate from the
French. There was a passage that proved extremely hard to understand
and put into English. I labored over it for many hours until I
finally arrived at what I thought Sartre might be saying. I was not
pleased with my offering. Several years later the New York
Philosophical Society published a book of four important Sartre
essays. My essay was among them. Eagerly I searched to see how those
scholars translated the passage. They hadn’t! They merely
eliminated it.)
Lapoujade
made movies using a variant of animation: a small brushstroke, snap a
picture, make another stroke, take the picture, and so on.
In
1968, his 90-minute film Socrates
created long lines of fans eager to see it. The film won a
special Jury Prize at the Venice Art Festival.
Lapoujade
made other films, won more honors, and influenced young artists by
serving as a professor in several national schools of art, including
the prestigious School of Decorative Arts in Paris.
Robert Lapoujade, Roc à Philadelphie, (appears to be a rock concert, very large crowd)
Lapoujade
and his beautiful wife and model Catherine went on vacation to
Greece. Along the way they were befriended by a family of peasants,
who graciously pulled out all stops to make the visitors welcome.
Unfortunately their cooking was not as good as their hearts, and the
copious meal was not easy for the French friends to eat.
When
the feast was finally finished, everyone relaxed in a false sense of
well-being, which soon exploded. Mama and papa brought out a
baby. They had dressed him in his best and put a Baby Caspar spit
curl in his hair.
“We
like you to paid our son!”
Of
course, the kind of painting they wanted was nothing like the
unsentimental stuff Lapoujade painted. Yet he could not refuse —
nor could he let himself be identified over a piece of pancake
syrup.
So
he did a sentimental little portrait. And since the farmers had never
been very clear about his name, he signed it “Lapipode,”
which rhymes with “the pea pod.”
Somewhere
in Thessalonika today a Greek family unknowingly owns an original
Lapoujade done in a style of which it is the only one of its kind in
the world. Lapoujade hoped they would never find out.
By
now the painting probably has been passed on to grandchildren as a
precious family relic.
Lawrence Jeppson is an art consultant, organizer and curator of art exhibitions, writer, editor
and publisher, lecturer, art historian, and appraiser. He is America's leading authority on
modern, handwoven French tapestries. He is expert on the works of William Henry Clapp, Nat
Leeb, Tsing-fang Chen, and several French artists.
He is founding president of the non-profit Mathieu Matégot Foundation for Contemporary
Tapestry, whose purview encompasses all 20th-century tapestry, an interest that traces back to
1948. For many years he represented the Association des Peintres-Cartonniers de Tapisserie and
Arelis in America.
Through the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, the American Federation of
Arts, the Museum of Modern Art, and his own Art Circuit Services he has been a contributor to
or organizer of more than 200 art exhibitions in the United States, Canada, Japan, and Taiwan.
He owns AcroEditions, which publishes and/or distributes multiple-original art. He was co-founder and artistic director of Collectors' Investment Fund.
He is the director of the Spring Arts Foundation; Utah Cultural Arts Foundation, and the Fine
Arts Legacy Foundation
Lawrence is an early-in-the-month home teacher, whose beat is by elevator. In addition, he has spent the past six years hosting and promoting reunions of the missionaries who served in the French Mission (France, Belgium, and Switzerland) during the decade after WWII.