c. 1900
Oil on panel
£2,550.00
View piece
Pierrot aux bonnet noir
by Armand Francois Henrion
c. 1910
Oil on panel
£3,250.00
View piece
Pierret et Monocole
by Armand Francois Henrion
c. 1900
Oil on panel
£2,750.00
View piece
Joyeux pierrot
by Armand Francois Henrion
c. 1900
Oil on panel
£2,950.00
View piece
Pierrot Surpris!
by Armand Francois Henrion
c. 1910
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Smoking Pierrot
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1910
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Smoking Pierot
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1910
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Pierrot
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1910
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Pierrot
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1910
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Pierrot
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1910
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Pierrot
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1900
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Pierrot fumant une cigare
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1910
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Pierrot grincheux
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1900
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Pierrot fumant
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1920
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Pierrot fumant
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1920
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Pierrot Fumant
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1910
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Pierrot au bonnet bleu
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
c. 1910
Oil on panel
SOLD
View piece
Pierrot au bonnet rouge
by Armand Francois Henrion - SOLD
Armand François Joseph Henrion was born in Liège in Belgium on May 30, 1875. He died in Paris in 1958. He eventually naturalized as a French citizen.
He was a regular exhibitor at various Salons throughout Paris and Belgium. He was best known for his small portraits depicting smiling facial expressions of clowns – these works are actually self portraits of the artist himself who would spend his days painting before a mirror in whatever costume or facial expression he chose depending on his mood..
Henrion had an all-consuming fascination with the character of Pierrot. Henrion portrayed himself as this comic trickster, who traditionally did not wear a mask, but instead applied heavy white face make-up. Henrion explored nuances of humor in his works which encompass the facial expressions conveying such qualities as the tongue-in-cheek, the retort, the comeback, the riposte, and the droll comment. His animated, gestural style in the creation of the small, jewel-like, depictions matches the feelings they convey of a light-hearted sense that life is to be enjoyed.
Museum and Gallery Holdings
Liège