The Marriage 1967
Jan Sierhuis
Oil paintTemperaPaint
132 ⨯ 122 cm
ConditionExcellent
€ 5.000
Art Dumay
- About the artworkThis is an exceptional work from an early period of Jan Sierhuis (1928–2023), depicting two intertwined figures in an expressive manner.
Dimensions: 130 × 120 cm
Dimensions with frame: 132 × 122 cm
After the war, Jan Sierhuis developed into an expressionist painter, influenced by artists such as Van Gogh, Matisse, and Picasso. Alongside Appel, Corneille, and Lucebert, he was at the heart of post-war developments in art.
In 1945, Sierhuis was admitted to the evening program at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, which he later left after a conflict. In 1947, he was involved with the Experimental Group, and in 1948 with the CoBrA movement, although he was too young to become an official member. Later, in 1962, he co-founded the Amsterdam-based artists’ group Groep Scorpio.
During the 1950s and 1960s, Sierhuis worked primarily in an abstract style. He later returned to the human figure, shifting his focus to figurative themes such as dancing figures, portraits, and landscapes. He spent many summers in Spain, where his passion for flamenco had a strong influence on his work. This dance embodies everything that characterizes his painting: color, emotion, movement, and rhythm.
Sierhuis always followed his own path. Freedom and expressiveness form the common thread throughout his oeuvre. - About the artist
Jan Sierhuis, born in Amsterdam in 1928, grew up in the Jordaan during the Depression. His father died when he was young, and his mother provided him with drawing materials on scrap paper from the offices she cleaned. From an early age, he knew he wanted to be a painter. He initially trained as a house painter but soon chose art. He briefly studied at the Rijksakademie, which he left due to his unconventional ideas. In the late 1940s, he became involved in the experimental circles surrounding the Cobra movement, although his young age prevented him from becoming an official member. In 1962, he co-founded the Amsterdam-based Scorpio Group, which pursued new exhibition formats.
His artistic development began with naturalistic landscapes and evolved into abstract paintings in the 1950s. From the mid-1960s, he returned to expressive figuration, with dancing figures, portraits, and colorful landscapes full of movement and rhythm. His many summers in Spain and his fascination with flamenco are palpable in the energy of his brushwork and the vibrant colors of his work. His paintings balance between freedom and structure, emotion and form, and are always rooted in life itself.
Sierhuis built an international reputation and exhibited in museums and galleries in the Netherlands, France, Mexico, Argentina, Sweden, the United States, and Japan. In 1971, the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam dedicated a major retrospective to his work and acquired more than 130 of his paintings and drawings. He received various awards, including the Royal Grant for Painting, the Thérèse van Duyl-Schwartze Prize, and the Jeanne Oosting Prize, and was appointed Officer in the Order of Orange-Nassau in 2002. He also taught at Psychopolis, the Rietveld Academy, and the Rijksakademie, among others, where his passion and direct style inspired many young artists.
Jan Sierhuis remained true to his expressive, personal painting style throughout his life, combining humor, emotion, and Amsterdam bravado. He died in 2023 in his native Amsterdam, leaving behind a vast and vibrant legacy that captures the essence of the human experience in color and movement.
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