1905 – 1985

Pierre Tal Coat

1905 – 1985

Pierre Tal Coat

From the early 1970s onwards, the French painter-printmaker Pierre Tal Coat made several stays at the Atelier de Saint-Prex, where Pietro Sarto and his team welcomed him and taught him technical skills that deepened his practice. Tal Coat made several important works in various printmaking processes, including woodcut, drypoint, aquatint and lithography. These include his Almanach (published first in Geneva in 1971 by Jacques Benador, then in Lausanne in 1975 and 1978 by Françoise Simecek), as well as his Laisses and his Sous le linteau en forme de joug (1978), which contain texts by his friend the poet André du Bouchet. This stimulating and inventive artist brought fresh air to the Atelier, not only through his independent thinking and brilliant conversation, but also his friendly attention to the younger artists who were active in the studio. 

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Pierre Jacob, who in 1926 adopted the pseudonym Tal Coat ("wood forehead" in Breton) to distinguish himself from the poet Max Jacob, was born in 1905 in Clohars-Carnoët, in Finistère. The son of a fisherman killed in the First World War, Tal Coat moved from job to job during his youth while teaching himself to paint. He arrived in Paris in 1924 and began exhibiting at the Fabre gallery in 1926. His early work, which was openly figurative, was influenced by various modernist movements, such as Fauvism, Cubism and Expressionism. He would make several important encounters in the 1930s, including with Francis Gruber, Alberto Giacometti and Gertrude Stein. The artist became known in avant-garde circles, and his work was shown at New York’s Julian Levy Gallery in 1938. His painting was marked by the troubles of his day—a series titled Massacres, for instance, was inspired by the Spanish Civil War. Mobilised in 1939, then demobilised in July 1940, Tal Coat settled in Aix-en-Provence, where many artists and writers had taken refuge from the Second World War. Three years later, he moved to the Château Noir, at the foot of the Sainte Victoire Mountain - the very spot where Cézanne used to paint. In Provence, Tal Coat's work underwent a full transformation: his palette became at once more fluid and more restrained, and his figures evaporated into a formalism that seemed to synthesize and essentialize the visible realm. Tal Coat would pursue this new mode of painting unceasingly over the following decades. He began exhibiting at the Galerie Maeght in 1954, and he was chosen to represent France at the 1956 Venice Biennale. In 1961, he moved to Saint-Pierre-de-Bailleul, in the Normandy countryside, where he worked until his death in 1985.

  • FWC&ASP-1991-0118

    Le Petit Troupeau, ou Passage du troupeau (the small herd or the passing herd)

    1971
    Lithograph with wash on wove Arches paper
    190 x 160 mm
    FWC&ASP-1991-0118

    © Pierre Tal Coat/ ProLitteris, Zurich, 2025 / © photo : Olivier Christinat
  • FWC&ASP-1991-0143

    Sur la face II (on the face II)

    1972
    Acrylic wash, drypoint and etching on wove paper
    151 x 116 mm
    Simecek/Mason 1972.41
    FWC&ASP-1991-0143

    © Pierre Tal Coat/ ProLitteris, Zurich, 2025 / © photo : Olivier Christinat
  • FWC&ASP-1991-0146(HD,-2021,-Julien-Gremaud)

    Labours I (ploughing I)

    1970
    Aquatint on Auvergne wove paper
    293 x 394 mm
    Simecek/Mason 1970.2
    FWC&ASP-1991-0146

    © Pierre Tal Coat/ ProLitteris, Zurich, 2025 / © photo : Julien Gremaud
  • FWC&ASP-2006-0021(HD,-Olivier-Christinat,-2016)

    Selfportrait 

    1976
    Drypoint on Arches wove paper
    279 x 151 mm
    Simecek/Mason 1976.1
    FWC&ASP-2006-0021

    © Pierre Tal Coat/ ProLitteris, Zurich, 2025 / © photo : Olivier Christinat
  • FWC&ASP-2016-0516

    Affût au bord du lac, planche n° LXXXIII des Inédits (Hunting blind by the lake, plate no. LXXXIII from the Unpublished Works)

    1972
    Etching on Moulin de Pombié wove paper
    117 x 161 mm
    FWC&ASP-2016-0516

    © Pierre Tal Coat/ ProLitteris, Zurich, 2025

Artists

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C

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    Canaletto

  • 1907 – 1990

    Albert Chavaz

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    Camille Corot

D

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    Marianne Décosterd

  • 1834 – 1917

    Edgar Degas

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    Albrecht Dürer

F

  • 1836 – 1904

    Henri Fantin-Latour

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    Albert Flocon

G

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    Jacques-Fabien Gautier-Dagoty

  • 1746 – 1828

    Francisco Goya

L

  • 1930 – 2023

    Jean Lecoultre

  • 1600 – 1682

    Claude Gellée (Le Lorrain)

  • 1939 – ...

    Ilse Lierhammer

M

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    Édouard Manet

  • 1598 – 1688

    Claude Mellan

  • 1890 – 1964

    Giorgio Morandi

N

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    Robert Nanteuil

P

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    Gérard de Palézieux

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    Pablo Picasso

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    Piranèse (Giovanni Battista Piranesi)

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    Camille Pissarro

Q

  • 1942 – ...

    Edmond Quinche

R

  • 1840 – 1916

    Odilon Redon

  • 1606 – 1669

    Rembrandt van Rijn

S

  • 1930 – ...

    Pietro Sarto

T

  • 1905 – 1985

    Pierre Tal Coat

V

  • 1875 – 1963

    Jacques Villon

  • 1868 – 1940

    Édouard Vuillard

Y

  • 1905 – 1984

    Albert-Edgard Yersin