William Didier-Pouget began his formal art training at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in his birth city, Toulouse. He later studied at the Academy of Paris under the famed French landscape painter, Jean Baudit. The painting he entered for his first exhibition, the Salon of 1866, seems atypical of his work in that it was a rather somber image; however, it did foreshadow the direction of the artist's oeuvre in the attention paid to atmospheric elements.
It was the countryside of Southern France that eventually led Didier-Pouget to focus on light and color in his landscapes. During his career, he developed a niche for translating the beauty of a field of flowers, a forest filled with trees, heathers with fog, plateaus in the Creuse valley, and the Dordogne river, onto a canvas.
He found success participating in various exhibitions, and after winning the gold medal in 1913 at the Exposition Universelle, he was selected as a member of the Jury as well as a permanent senior member of the Societe des Artistes Francais.
Gold medal, Exposition Universelle, 1913
Societe des Artistes Francais
Salon of 1866
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA: Le Matin
Leipzig, Germany: Le Soir, L'Aude aux bruyères
Lyon, France: Bruyères dans la lande
Macon, France: Crépescule
Montpellier, France: Brume du matin
Orléans, France: Bruyères, Soleil couchant
Petit Palais, Paris, France: Landes aux bruyères
Toulouse, France: Environs de Tarbés, Bruyères et fleurs
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Monday - Friday: 9:00 am - 5:30 pm
Evenings & Weekends
by appointment