Tralala goes fishing

with Ellen Turner Hall

TRALALA’s latest exhibition “Les derniers pêcheurs de Collioure”   is dedicated to the work of Emile Humbert.  Young and self-taught,  Humbert shows remarkable talent for  portraying daily life, be it at work, at play or in quiet contemplation.

 

The artist  chronicles  the  activity of the last two fishermen of Collioure, the brothers Laurent and Vincent, their every gesture dedicated to keeping alive  a great tradition now lost.   The boats, the ropes, the nets, the gnarly arms and muscled shoulders of the men, the scaly shimmer of the fish are lovingly recorded in charcoal and  oil.

Tourists colonize the sand  where once fishing boats reigned. In  Humbert’s beach scenes,  the flotsam and jetsam of flesh,  towels,  parasols and  plastic buoys  cover the seafront, with the sun-bleached church in the background. A group of boys scale rocky cliffs. A middle-aged man  contemplates the horizon.  All are   acutely  observed, with  a bit of humour thrown in, especially in the “Barque adidas et survêt’ Catalan”.

Perhaps the most dramatic  example of Humbert‘s  art is a  night scene outside a bar. Reminiscent of  Edward Hopper’s   depiction  of haunted loners, its simplicity and dreamlike quality fish the  width and depth of the  human soul.

 


Tralala Galerie

is open 11h-13h and 16h-20h. Closed Tuesdays.

“Les derniers pêcheurs de Collioure” runs from 18 October to 30 November.   Galerie Tralala, Boulevard Boramar, Collioure.

 

Friday 27th September 201

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