Camille Bombois is one of the most prominent representatives of naive art ("singers of the sacred heart") discovered by Wilhelm Uhde. His life is an adventurous novel: he was a circus fighter, a worker, and became an artist self-taught. His paintings are a hymn to strength, flesh, and healthy coarseness. Unlike the dreamy Seraphine, Bombois painted powerful women, muscular men, circus scenes, and rural festivals. His style is sometimes called "hyperrealism," although he is far from academicism. Let's get to know him.
Camille Bombois was born in 1883 in Venarey-le-Loir (Burgundy) in a farmer's family. Since childhood, he drew with chalk on walls. At 17, he joined the circus: worked as an acrobat, a fighter (the famous "Invisible Fighter"). Injuries forced him to leave the ring. He became a worker at a metallurgical plant in Paris, and at night he painted. No one bought his paintings. In the 1920s, Wilhelm Uhde noticed him, included him in the group "Singers of the Sacred Heart." Uhde organized exhibitions, sold works, but Bombois remained poor until the end of his life, working at the factory. He died in 1970, having seen a small recognition.
Bombois painted with oil, thick strokes, but smoothing the surface (not like Rousseau with his texture). His characters are stocky, with large hands and feet, their faces often rough. His women are in the flesh, with full figures, they swim, dance, feed children. Eroticism is open but without vulgarity. Men are athletes, fishermen, loaders. Bombois loved contrasts: light and shadow, nakedness and clothing. The background is often dark, figures are illuminated. He painted quickly, without sketches.
Many paintings are dedicated to the circus: fighters, acrobats, clowns. "Fighters" (1925) — two powerful bodies entwined in a struggle, the audience — shadows. "Acrobat on the ball" — a girl in a leotard balancing. These works are full of dynamics, although the figures are static. Bombois remembered his youth when he himself stepped onto the ring. The circus was an ideal world for him, where strength and beauty merge.
Bombois painted harvesting, fishing, laundry. "Bathers" — his signature theme: women on the riverbank, naked but unashamed. He painted them with a love for flesh, without voyeurism. Still lifes — fruit, game, fish. Everything is large, juicy, almost tangible. Bombois said: "I write what I love: women, muscles, food."
Bombois is closer to realism than Seraphine. He has no mysticism, angels, burning eyes. He is earthly, carnal. His paintings can be called "socialist realism," but without ideology. If Rousseau wrote about jungles he had never seen, then Bombois wrote about what he knew.
Bombois did not wait for fame during his lifetime. After his death (1970), interest grew. His works are in the Museum of Modern Art in Paris, New York, Tokyo. In 2015, a retrospective was held in Montreux. He is called the "French Gauguin" (for his love of the body). His influence on modern naive art is enormous.
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