Donjon Château de La Roche-Guyon : Joyeux bouchon champagne (2015) Painting by Applestrophe

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  • Original Artwork (One Of A Kind) Painting, Acrylic on Canvas
  • Dimensions Height 23.6in, Width 23.6in
  • Framing This artwork is framed (Floating Frame)
  • Categories Paintings under $5,000 Conceptual Art
A étudié et peint en vrai 2014 -2015 notre donjon du château Roche-Guyon (95780, Val d'Oise) car ce géant donjon 30 mètres avait été réduit en 1793 à 20 mètres de haut. Donc, ai étudié l'histoire, et donc peint bien pour présenter vraiment un événement "bouchon de champagne". Donc, ce tableau, c'est pas négatif, pas critique[...]
A étudié et peint en vrai 2014 -2015 notre donjon du château Roche-Guyon (95780, Val d'Oise) car ce géant donjon 30 mètres avait été réduit en 1793 à 20 mètres de haut. Donc, ai étudié l'histoire, et donc peint bien pour présenter vraiment un événement "bouchon de champagne".
Donc, ce tableau, c'est pas négatif, pas critique de la révolution française 1793, au contraire, c'est un aspect sympa, c'est une histoire positive pour le village de La Roche-Guyon.
Le bouchon de Champagne saute, fait exploser une partie du mur du donjon du Château de La Roche-Guyon.
Les pierres volent. (regardez les bulles de champagne que j'ai peint)
Cela dit, beaucoup de maisons du coin sont construites utilement avec ces cailloux perdus !
Donc, c'est vraiment un événement "bouchon de champagne". Très marrant, les pauvres petits bourgeois touristes-promeneurs qui passent, eux, trouvent tous ma peinture désagréable, hi hi hi ! (Ils ne savent donc pas que les cailloux ont étés tout de suite recyclés en le village, et que de toutes façons cette tour était énorme, 30 mètres de haut avec un très violent et méchant regard militaire.

Aujourd'hui le donjon érigé vers 1190 ne s'élève pas plus haut que le deuxième étage désormais à ciel ouvert. On peut y admirer une vue imprenable sur la vallée de la Seine.
Ile de France, La Roche Guyon
Acrylique sur toile, 60 x 60 cm peint dehors en vrai, sur motif, août 2015

Related themes

DonjonRoche-GuyonVal D'oiseChâteauChampagne

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Pierre Marcel SCHMIDT, also known as Applestrophe, is an international painter specializing in ecological art. Born 35 years ago, he became an “ambassador of France” through his works focused on love and apples.[...]

Pierre Marcel SCHMIDT, also known as Applestrophe, is an international painter specializing in ecological art. Born 35 years ago, he became an “ambassador of France” through his works focused on love and apples. His artistic journey took him to Miami Beach, Florida, where he left his mark in the heart of the historic Art-Deco district.

During his career, Pierre Marcel Schmidt has maintained a close link with three French regions, where he creates daily: Île de France, Normandy and Picardy. In addition, he devoted each summer to the study of the South of France, in particular Saint-Cyr-sur-Mer.

His professional career is rich in notable achievements. In the 1970s and 1980s, he began his career as a screen printer, then became a decorator, running a business with up to ten employees. His work consisted of beautifying Parisian restaurants and cinemas while promoting environmental protection.

From 1986 to 2005, Pierre Marcel Schmidt became an international decorator under the name Pierre Marcel, working in the United States, in Miami, Florida, with the company "Subject to Change". He contributed to the preservation and renovation of the Art-Deco area of ​​Miami Beach, decorating stores, private and public spaces, as well as commissioned municipal murals. For seven years, from 1991 to 1998, he traveled to Moscow as an official American expert to create the scenery for the first tourist attractions and the new Moscow City Hall, while helping to train Russian students in trades of official decorators.

In 2001, Pierre Marcel Schmidt returned to France, this time as an ecological painter. He lives in Guerny, in Eure, where he works publicly to promote the Vexin Français Regional Natural Park. Since 2003, he has created daily artistic works in public art at the Salle du Prieuré in Saint-Clair-sur-Epte, a village linked to the history of the creation of Normandy during the peace treaty of 911 with the Vikings.

From 2013 to 2016, he also directed a workshop-gallery located in La Roche Guyon. Throughout his career, Pierre Marcel Schmidt, aka Applestrophe, has used art as a means of raising awareness of ecology and promoting French history and culture.

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