Georges Bernède French, 1926-2023
Signed and dated verso
Inventory number 332
Faced with rejection, Bernede continued to paint in solitude and rarely showed his work. Thus, Bernede did not suffer any pressure to conform to any commercial demand or intellectual expectations and had the chance to explore art freely. In his continuous search to express the poetry of Life, Bernede tried to establish an analogy to musical rhythm in his painting, thus naturally growing towards gestural painting, partnered with a monochrome palette. Whilst being deceptively subtle, Bernede’s paintings show dramatic movement and impact through the energetic application of the paint.
Bernède started painting properly in 1945, under the guidance of Mildred Bendall (1891-1977)., whom herself was a pupil of Herni Matisse Initially Bernède followed Bendall's advice to use colour as the building blocks for composition and expression. His first post-cubist canvases were exhibited at the yearly exhibitions of the Artistes Indepéndants de Bordeaux, the Group 'Sève' and the Group 'Le Regard' during the 1940s and 1950s. During 1968 -1984, Bernède progressed into colourful Abstraction. Since the mid-1980s his palette became almost monochrome. His black and white canvasses lit up by spare dots or strokes of colour, are testimony to his desire to convey timeless space, much in the manner of the composer Gyorgi Ligeti (1923-2006). Bernède himself often compares the rhythm of his paintings to music, as he continues his search into abstract expression of the essence of life. Bernède was born, lived and worked in the Bastide town of and Monségur, France until his death in 2023.
Provenance
The Artist
Exhibitions
2011, Georges Bernède, Whitford Fine Art, London
2021, BENDALL / BERNÈDE: A Story of Painting in Bordeaux, Whitford Fine Art, LondonLiterature
Georges Bernède, exhibition catalogue with introduction by An Jo FERMON, Whitford Fine Art, London, 2011, ill.
BENDALL / BERNEDE: A Story of Painting in Bordeaux, exhibition catalogue with introduction by A.J. Fermon, Whitford Fine Art, London, 2021, cat. no. 24, ill.