Joseph Lacasse Belgian, 1894-1975
Lacasse Estate Inventory Number Dia no. 554
Certificate of Authenticity by Mme Koob-Lacasse
In 1925, Lacasse left his native Belgium to settle Paris in the Impasse Ronsin, in a studio next to Constantin Brancusi. Lacasse had initially trained as a painter of religious scenes. However, with Brancusi as his neighbour, he was inspired to revisit his teenage interest in light and the composition of stone. During 1927-1928, Lacasse met Robert and Sonia Delaunay whose influence on his colour-palette would be profound. With their continued encouragement, Lacasse soon found his own unique style of abstraction.
At the onset of the Second World War, Lacasse left Paris for Britain. Upon his return to Paris in 1946, after having spent the war years in Britain, Lacasse had been overshadowed by Serge Poliakoff. The latter admitted having learnt much from Lacasse during the late 1930s, when he was a frequent visitor to Lacasse's Montparnasse gallery 'L' Équipe'. What characterises the work of Lacasse is the intense, continuous vibration of light communicated through colour. Lacasse's oeuvre is indeed testimony to his search for the ultimate metaphysical light, inspired by his reading of Thomas Aquinas' 'Beatudes'.
The works of Lacasse are included in the following museums: Musée d'art moderne de la Ville de Paris, Musée national d'art Moderne, Centre Pompidou, Paris, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, Musée de Tournai, Tournai, Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Tel Aviv, Eilat Museum, Eilat, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris.
Whitford Fine Art has represented the Lacasse Estate since 2015.
Provenance
The Estate of the Artist.
Exhibitions
1972, Maitres du Nord et des Flandres, centre artistique Bondues-Marcq, Marcq-en-Baroeil, France; 2015, Joseph Lacasse: Pioneer of Abstraction, Whitford Fine Art, London.
Literature
Joseph Lacasse: Pioneer of Abstraction, exhibition catalogue with essay by An Jo FERMON, Whitford Fine Art, London, 2015, cat. no. 41, ill.