Edouard Jean Marie Manduau (1855–1938) was a Belgian landscape painter and watercolorist best known for his work in the Congo Free State and the countryside around Brussels.
Edouard Jean Marie Manduau | |
---|---|
Born | Edouard Jean Marie Manduau ca. 1855 Ixelles, Belgium |
Died | ca. 1938 Nieuwpoort, Belgium |
Occupation | Painter |
Manduau was born in Ixelles, and studied in art academies in London and Brussels (1871), where he was a classmate and friend of James Ensor. In 1884 he joined the International Association of the Congo, where he led expeditions and public works projects. His drawings and paintings, about 70 in number, created a valuable record of the Congo and its people; when in 1885 they were exhibited at Brussels, he was widely acclaimed. However, in protest at some of the "civilizing methods" practiced in the Congo, he resigned and returned to Belgium, where he worked for the opposition newspaper Le Moniteur du Congo. He exhibited at the Salon des Artistes congolais in 1933. Manuau died in Nieuwpoort, Belgium, in 1938. His works are displayed at the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Tervuren.
References
edit- Congo Forum article
- Civilisation au Congo, Royal Museum for Central Africa
- "L'Exposition du Congo and Edouard Manduau's la Civilisation au Congo (1884–1885)", by Sabine Cornelis, Maria Moreno, and John Peffer, Critical Interventions: Journal of African Art History and Visual Culture, pages 125–140, Volume 1, Issue 1, 2007.
- Bonhams note
- Edouard Manduau, Royal Museum for Central Africa