Eugène Brands
SKU: HL041 OverviewEugene Brands. Collage 53x65cm. "7608 New York, May 1985"
Eugene Brands, Amsterdam 1913 - Amsterdam 2002
In 1946 Eugene Brands took part in the group exhibition "Young Painters" in the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. His innovative work impressed the other exhibitors and Eugene Brands was persuaded to join the Experimental Group. Eugene brands maintained contacts with the Stedelijk Museum and this led to the "International exhibition of experimental art" in 1949.
In the meantime, the COBRA movement had also been set up by painters such as Constant Nieuwenhuis, Karel Appel and Corneille and the experimental group took it in. The large group exhibition at the Stedelijk was actually the first public presentation of COBRA and various works by Eugene Brands were on display. His work from that period showed a relationship with the sensitive abstract work of Piet Ouborg. Eugene Brands was also interested in primitive folk art, the music of which appealed to him in particular. He tried to incorporate the magical elements of these cultures into his work.
The innovative work of the COBRA painters was not understood and aroused great anger from the public and the press. After disagreements about the exhibition, Eugene Brands left the COBRA group and retired to his painting studio. This self-imposed isolation lasted about ten years.
During this period he made work that was inspired by children's drawings. The spontaneous drawings of his young daughter Eugenie fascinated Brands and were a grateful source of inspiration. The spontaneous expression with which he depicts the magical world of a child was a typical COBRA trait. He was also influenced by the work of Paul Klee and Marc Chagall. Eugene Brands' childlike performances gradually acquired a fairytale atmosphere, in which people or things fly or float. Beautiful small works, mostly oil on paper and gouache, were the result.