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William Didier-Pouget : ウィキペディア英語版 | William Didier-Pouget
William Didier-Pouget (Toulouse 14 November 1864 - Digulleville 12 September 1959) was a French artist, born in 1864, Toulouse, France, known for his landscape paintings. He focused primarily on the countryside of southern France, infusing his landscapes, always painted outdoors (en plein air), with light and color. Didier-Pouget is associated with the later phase of Impressionism, although not actually identified with the group of artists typically known as the Impressionists.〔(Base de données bibliographiques Malraux, ''Le Paysagiste Didier-Pouget'', by Joseph Uzanne, Editor Eugène Figuière, Paris, 1923 )〕 His career as an exhibiting artist stems from 1886 onwards.〔(Peintre Bordelais, Didier-Pouget )〕 He was a member of the Société des Artistes Français, a member of l'École de Crozant〔(Brive Roche, 1908, Bulletin de la Société scientifique historique et archéologique de la Corrèze )〕 and Société des Peintres de Montagne.〔(New York Times, Current Art Matters, April 14, 1907 )〕 Also, laureate of ''l'Institut au Concours Troyon'', Officer of the order of Nichan Iftikar (Order of Glory (Tunisia))〔(Figures Contemporaines, L'Album Mariani, 1906, E. Flammarion (Paris), Vol. 10 )〕 and Officer of the Legion of Honour.〔(Archives nationales, Ministère de la Culture )〕 ==Early life==
William Didier-Pouget was the son of a newspaper editor. Antoine Paul Jules Edgar Pouget, a nature lover, encouraged William in his ambition to become an artist. The two would often take long walks together, the elder pointing out natural phenomena while discussing methods of their pictorial representation. He related biographical details of the great artists, past and present, and in every possible way trained the boy while rousing his ambition.〔(Wynford Dewhurst, 1904, ''Impressionist Painting, its genesis and development'' ), Chapter X, ''La Peinture Claire: Glaus, Le Sidaner, Besnard, Didier-Pouget'', pp. 85-87, 102, Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University, Fine Arts Library〕 Didier-Pouget began his formal art training at the ''École des Beaux-Arts'' in the city of Toulouse. He later studied at the ''Académie de Paris'' with Amédée (Jean Amédée) Baudit, the famed French landscape painter, and made his debut at the Salon de Paris in 1886. He later studied with Louis-Augustin Auguin, an associate of Gustave Courbet and Jean-Baptiste Corot. Ultimately, Didier-Pouget was accepted into the studio of Maxime Lalanne, the celebrated artist, illustrator and etcher. Under these influences many profitable years followed. The seeds were sown for what would become Didier-Pouget's fruitful career as an artist.〔 William Didier-Pouget married Caroline Salley (1863–1949) and had a daughter, Yvonne (1885–1971). Yvonne Aubert-Didier-Pouget (aka Charline Abbeille) became an artist painter and miniaturist.〔(Cimetière de Montmartre )〕
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