Eugène Henri Alexandre Chigot 

1860 – 1923, French

Eugène Henri Alexandre Chigot was a post impressionist French painter. He was a pupil of his father, the military painter Alphonse Chigot. In 1881, he entered the internationally renowned École des Beaux-Arts in Paris where he was exposed to the ideas of the realist movement of the Barbizon School and to Impressionism. He settled in Étaples in the Pas-de-Calais in an artists’ colony, later returning to Paris where he became a founder of the Salon d’Automne. As an official military painter, he painted a series of canvases in Calais and Nieuport recording the destruction caused by the First World War. Chigot’s reputation was built on his maritime and landscape paintings that arose from his affinity to Flanders and the Pas-de-Calais. He recorded the lives of the people of Flanders placing them within a landscape of soft opalescent light. Later his paintings show traces of expressionism and a more vibrant pallet. He was also a skilled nocturne painter who travelled extensively within France, Italy and Spain.

 

  • Eugène Henri Alexandre Chigot 

    Troupes en Bord de Riviere