Antoni Taulé (born 1945) is a Spanish painter, architect, and performer. A street artist during the sixties, his art has been labelled as part of hyperrealism and a representative of the “new figurative” movement. He paints classical empty buildings and interiors: ballrooms, office receptions, halls of the Louvre museum, chambers of the Prado, the Palace of Versailles, monumental spaces that fuse reality and fiction under a fleeting atmosphere of light.

Antoni Taulé
Antoni Taulé in 2014.
Born(1945-08-25)August 25, 1945
NationalitySpanish
EducationEscola Tècnica Superior d'Arquitectura de Barcelona (ETSAB)
Known forpainting, engraving, photography
Notable workMarquis de Sade, Alignement VI, scenography of ballet Washington Square by Henry James, Rudolf Nureyev
Movementhyperealism
AwardsChevalier des Arts et des Lettres
Patron(s)Joan Brossa
Websitewww.antonitaule.com

The building is actually just like a person. It has a heart, lungs, a nervous system, intestines, and eyes ... I am fascinated with what one can see, with the reason why does one look at it or avoid looking, and how one reflects upon what he sees. In one word my work is about how a man functions.

His unique creative universe mixes scientific and mathematical concepts and a passion for art from the past, Italian, Dutch and Spanish old masters, especially Diego Velázquez and Francisco Goya. It has inspired numbers of writers and critics, like Jean-Christophe Bailly or Julio Cortázar who, fascinated by Taulé's rooms and tables, wrote the story “Fin de etapa”, in Deshoras,[1] a book published in 1983. From 1982 onwards, Antoni Taulé has created set designs, largely springing from development in his own painting, for some of the great opera and theatre, including Washington Square, Henry James's novel, adapted by Rudolf Nureyev, Enfance and Pour un oui, pour un non (For No Good Reason) by Nathalie Sarraute, or Francis Poulenc and his Dialogues of the Carmelites adapted from a play by Georges Bernanos.

Collections edit

Selected solo exhibitions edit

Selected group exhibitions edit

Selected bibliography edit

  • Collectif; Cortázar, Julio; Pradel, Jean-Louis; Bonaccorsi, Robert (2006). La pintura de Taulé, peintures 1966–2006 (in French). La Seyne-sur-Mer, France, Toulon Provence Méditerranée, communauté d'agglomération. ISBN 2-91571-809-1. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  • Sala Sanahuja, Joaquim (2005). Taulé-filiacions, Josep Maria Taulé i Coll, Antoni Taulé i Pujol, Tigrane Tanguy Théodore Taulé Ney (in French and Catalan). imprimerie Snoeck-Ducaju & Zoon. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  • Lætitia Ney d’Elchingen, Læticia (1998). Nox (in French). Galerie Kiron.
  • De Smedt, Marc; Cortázar, Julio; Jouffroy, Alain; Brossa, Joan; Bailly, Jean-Christophe; Král, Petr; Sautreau, Serge; Raillard, Georges; Balsach Peig, Maria Joseph; Domecq, Jean-Philippe; Baatsch, Henri-Alexis; David, Catherine; Fournier, Michel; Sala-Sanahuja, Joaquim; Giralt Miracle, Daniel; Gassiot-Talabot, Gérald (1981). Laboratoire de lumière (in French). Cesare Rancilio Editeur.

T.V. Interviews and Reports edit

References edit

  1. ^ * Cortázar, Julio (1982). Deshoras (in Spanish). Retrieved February 26, 2013. Silva Cáceres, Raúl (1997). El árbol de las figuras: estudio de motivos fantásticos en la obra de Julio Cortázar (in Spanish). ISBN 9789562820103. Retrieved February 26, 2013.

External links edit