|
Biography | Portfolio
|
I am not trying, says Guy Buffet, "to convey a message in my work. Instead, each painting
is an invitation to a world where my dreams and fantasies become reality." Since he sold his
first watercolor at the age of thirteen to an American tourist who was visiting the Buffet
family restaurant in Paris, that reality has included, among other things, landscapes of
Polynesia,
|
dreamscapes of Hawaii, several battalions of quirky French culinary workers,
historical scenes of the French Revolution, and a few dour Scotsmen on wind-blasted moors
unaccountably trying to play golf. His sublime sense of the burlesque is unparalleled and
infectious.
Buffet's father was sixty-three years old when his son was born in 1943 and died before Guy
was a teenager. For his twelfth birthday Guy's mother gave him a set of paints and brushes,
which he passionately put to use. In 1957 he and his mother moved to a town in Provence near
the Mediterranean port of Toulon, where she enrolled him in the Beaux Arts de Toulon Art School.
The following year he began to study advanced painting at L'Academie de Peinture de la Ville de
Paris, and his studies continued there until he was drafted into the French Navy in 1961.
While serving on the cruiser De Grasse as gunner's mate, Buffet had his first one-man show.
Organized by the Mayor of Papeete, Tahiti at the Gallerie Mourareau, the show was a sellout. As
the cruiser made calls on other ports in the Pacific, Guy continued his one-man shows. In this way,
a certain young French sailor began to make a name for himself in the world of international art.
Today he is world famous for his whimsical humor.
Considerations of space preclude mentioning more than a fraction of Guy Buffet's artistic
accomplishments. He has assembled countless one-man shows in literally every part of the globe and
served as official artist for numerous advertising campaigns, including Champagne Perrier-Jouet,
Absolut Vodka, Aloha Airlines, and the Tour De France. His works are displayed in several museums,
including La Musée de la Monnaie in Paris, the Museum of the French Navy in Toulon, the Honolulu
Academy of Art, and the John Deere Museum. They are part of more than twenty corporate collections,
including Seagrams, IBM, Bank of America, Grand Marnier, Westin Hotels, and American Isuzu Motors.
His art has been chosen by thousands of private collectors, among whom are Maurice Chevalierk, Jackie
Stewart, Rory Calhoun, Kirk Douglas, Rod Stewart, John Harrison, Edgar Bronfman, John McVay, Charles
Feeney, Van Cliburn, Paul Bocuse, Wolfgang Puck, and the former American Vice-President Dan Quayle.
|