Chaim Soutine Paintings


Chaim Soutine was a Belarusian-born French Expressionist painter known for his emotive and turbulent style that became a significant influence on the abstract expressionist movement. Born in Smilavichy, Russian Empire (now Belarus), Soutine grew up in a poor Jewish family, which shaped his early perspectives on life and art. He moved to Paris in 1913 to study at the École des Beaux-Arts under the guidance of Fernand Cormon, where he was exposed to the works of the Old Masters in the Louvre.

Soutine's work is characterized by its intense color, distorted form, and visceral depiction of flesh, decay, and the human figure, often conveying a profound sense of anguish. He was part of the School of Paris, a group of artists made up mostly of émigrés living in Paris, and he was closely associated with other artists like Modigliani. His best-known series, the 'Carcass of Beef' (also known as 'The Flayed Ox'), shows his obsession with the theme of meat and butchery, reflecting both his childhood exposure to Jewish ritual slaughter and his fixation on the theme of mortality.

Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, Soutine's fame grew, especially after the American collector Albert C. Barnes discovered his work. Despite his rising reputation, Soutine lived a tumultuous life marked by episodes of depression and instability. He was deeply affected by the outbreak of World War II and the Occupation of France by Germany, particularly due to his Jewish background, which forced him into hiding.

Soutine died in Paris in 1943 from complications of a stomach ulcer. His legacy endures in the expressionistic power of his paintings, influencing generations of artists who followed. He is remembered as a painter who brought emotional depth and a unique painterly style to the early 20th-century art scene.