Henri Cadiou


Henri Cadiou was a French realist painter and lithographer known for his work in trompe-l'oeil paintings. He is credited with being a founder of the l’école de la réalité in 1949. 'De la Réalité' was reaction against abstract art, seen at the Salon de Mai of 1960 where he exhibited paintings that were almost photographically realistic, in particular Shower Curtain and Electoral Panel, with which he caused a stirReacting against abstract art. He was also president of the Association for the Protection of the Cité Fleurie, a wooded area around the boulevard Arago in Paris's 13th arrondissement where about thirty artist’s studios are located. Through his extreme realist style, Cadiou created trompe-l'oeil paintings by grouping together large numbers of everyday objects. He also painted genre scenes. Some of Cadiou's most famous works are 'Le mégot, 1971' and 'Handel with Care, 1996'
Because of renewed interest in precursors to contemporary hyperrealism, the group of painters associated with the “peintres de la réalité” are seeing a contemporary resurgence and have been exhibiting now for about fifty years in the Salons as well as in personal or collective shows as well as in Europe, Asia, North America, Canada, Brazil, etc.

Chronology