Hugo Naudé
Born1868
Died1941
Worcester
OccupationPainter
Known forArtwork
SpouseJulia Brown

Pieter Hugo Naudé, better known as Hugo Naudé, (1869–1941) was a South African painter.[1]

Hugo Naudé is regarded as one of South Africa’s pioneer artists and is largely considered the country’s first ever professional artist.

Early years

Naudé was born and raised on his family farm, Aan de Doorns in the Cape district of Worcester – an area whose landscape would inspire much of the artist’s output throughout his life.

Naudé showed great artistic talent from a young age and was encouraged by his family to pursue it.

Biography

In 1889 he travelled to London where he trained at the prestigious Slade School of Fine Art, and the following year he continued his studies at the Academy of Fine Arts Munich (AKDB, München). Whilst in Europe, Naudé spent a year in Fontainebleau where he lived and worked amongst the Barbizon School of painters. Just as the French group inspired the likes of Monet in his explorations of Impressionism, they also inspired Naudé to create his own Cape Impressionist style – one which was adopted by generations of artists who followed him, including Gregoire Boonzaier, Pierneef, and Ruth Prowse.[2]

Upon his return to South Africa in 1896, Naudé adapted his European influences and teachings so as to more accurately reflect the abundance and brilliance of his local landscape. Motivated by his great love for nature and landscape, Naudé travelled by caravan on many painting expeditions across Southern Africa. Painting en plein air with bold hues of yellow and orange below, and clear blue skies above, Naudé captured the landscapes he encountered with great confidence and a unique freshness never-before-seen in his home country.

Career and legacy

Over a century later, Naudé’s works continue to be sought after, and his legacy fondly remembered. In 1939, two years before his death, Naudé was awarded the Medal of Honour for painting by the South African Akademie (Suid-Afrikaanse Akademie vir Wetenskap en Kuns). He has been recognized with two retrospective exhibitions, the first in 1969 at the Pretoria Art Museum, and the second at the South African National Gallery in Cape Town in 1974.[3]

Art Education

1889-90: Slade School London, under Alphonse Legros.

1890-94: Kunst Akademie, Munich, under portraitist Franz von Lenbach.

1895: with the Barbizon Group, Fontainebleau.

1913: etching at the Chelsea Arts Club, off King's Road, London; and further study in Munich.

References

  1. Berman, Esmé (1993). Painting in South Africa. Southern Book Publishers. p. 12. ISBN 9781868124794. OCLC 491296764.
  2. "South African Modernism Collection: University of Pretoria Museums".
  3. "european stylistic influence on early south african painters" (PDF).
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