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Gustave De Smet - Fair at Vrijdagmarkt in Ghent

Fair at Vrijdagmarkt in Ghent (1907)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
Why is this image in the public domain?
The Artist died in 1943 so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries where the copyright term is the Artist's life plus 70 years or fewer.
Gustave De Smet

Gustave Franciscus De Smet was a Belgian painter. Together with Constant Permeke and Frits Van den Berghe, he was one of the founders of Flemish Expressionism. His younger brother, Léon De Smet [fr], also became a painter.

He was born in Ghent. His father, Jules, was a set decorator and photographer. Both Gustave and his brother began working in their father's studio, then attended the Royal Academy of Fine Arts, where they studied under Jean Delvin. Unlike Léon, Gustave was considered to be an indifferent student.

In 1908, he and his wife followed Léon to the artists' colony in Sint-Martens-Latem. There, they initially came under the influence of Luminism and the painter Emile Claus, who lived in nearby Astene. At the beginning of World War I, he and his family joined his friend, Van den Berghe, and fled to the Netherlands. From 1914 to 1922, they moved about, visiting and staying at the art colonies in Amsterdam, Laren and Blaricum. His meeting with the Expressionist painter Henri Le Fauconnier marked a turning point in his style which, up until then, owed much to Cubism.

He returned to Belgium in 1922, but continued to move frequently, usually in the company of his friends Van den Berghe and Permeke, beginning in Oostende, then to Bachte-Maria-Leerne and Afsnee, where he lived in a villa provided by the art promoter and journalist, Paul-Gustave van Hecke. In 1927, he finally settled in Deurle.

It was there that his mixture of Expressionism and Cubism peaked, with a series of works depicting circus, fairground and village scenes. After his death in Deurle at the age of sixty-six, his house was preserved as a local museum.

More Artworks by Gustave De Smet (View all 53 Artworks)

Dorpskermis 

Dorpskermis  (1930)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
Fishing Village

Fishing Village (1920)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
Girl with a Bouquet

Girl with a Bouquet (1938)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
Child’s head

Child’s head (1916)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
Dorpskermis

Dorpskermis (1930)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
Landscape with Black Italian Poplars

Landscape with Black Italian Poplars (1942)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
Woman at the Window

Woman at the Window (1920)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
Clouds

Clouds (1933)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
View of the Stropbrug in Ghent

View of the Stropbrug in Ghent (1906-1907)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
A Bunch Of Dark Flowers

A Bunch Of Dark Flowers (1919)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
Woman Sleeping

Woman Sleeping (1919)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
Dorpsgezicht

Dorpsgezicht (1936)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
Stable

Stable (1939)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
Naakt met halssnoer

Naakt met halssnoer (1935)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
The Mussel Eaters

The Mussel Eaters (1923)

Gustave De Smet (Dutch, 1877 – 1943)
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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
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