| Samir Sammoun | ![]() Retour |

Rue, Saint-Denis (II), 30" X 40"
![]() SAMIR SAMMOUN - Samir Sammoun was born in a quaint Lebanese village perched atop the Chouf Mountain, 40 km south of Beirut. To this day, the artist vividly recalls the colorful Mediterranean landscape of his childhood. At age 21, Samir Sammoun immigrated from Lebanon to Canada where he obtained degrees in electronic engineering and telecommunications. Since graduation, he has pursued his professional career as well as his passion, painting. Chris Klimantiris, who began representing Samir Sammoun in 1996, provides an eloquent reaction to the artists work. The first time that I saw Samirs paintings, I was fascinated by his refined technique. I felt like a time traveler, transported to turn-of-the-century Paris and the Impressionists. Samir Sammoun does have a unique postimpressionist style and technique. A great colorist by nature, he has a very rich palette of up to 30 tones and shades. He uses soft, round brushes and works mainly on jute, a rougher, stronger material than the traditional linen canvas. Jute is capable of holding the generous amount of material that Samir uses to create a backdrop. When starting to paint, Sammoun carefully prepares his canvas with burnt sienna, which he applies with a pig-bristle brush then wipes with a rag to remove any excess. His goal is to have the grain of the canvas show. This technique is used to create the illusion of light throughout the painting. Layers of paint give a natural texture to the canvas. The artists technique, successive voluntary strokes, generates a certain relief and variation in the shades. A landscape artist, Samir Sammoun has a vast repertoire of pictorial themes, e.g. willows, apple trees in bloom, wheat fields, olive trees, villages, storms, churchyards and streetscapes. His paintings reflect a tranquil happy mood. This is the art of a man who loves life. As the artist puts it, I try to make the person looking at my painting feel the color of the sky, the temperature of the air, and the breeze in the apple trees or the wheat stalks. Sammouns art should be viewed from a distance of a few feet. At first glance, his paintings seem blurred. Only when the viewer is at the right distance does the depth of the relief and scene appear in three dimensions. Sammoun almost never uses classical perspective. His initial sketch resembles a few blotches that outline shadows and basic reference points in the scene that he has already turned over many times in his mind. The work is then carried out in the automatiste style that relies on the number of strokes previously applied. The final result comes only at the end when the layers of light are placed in the appropriate places according to the texture generated. Sammouns subtle touch appears in his wheat fields series. Here the rhythmic gesture of the artist combines grace and spontaneity. The delicate touches highlight the slender stalks and the tufts heavy with grain. The artist knows instinctively where the impact should be in the painting. At times, it is the canvas that seems to evolve on its own. It is through this process that I feel I am playing with the fate of my renderings on the canvas. And it is from this inspiration that I feel I am the one to harness the fate of what is to follow. Samir Sammouns originality and unique style have caught the attention of viewers, collectors and art lovers in Canada and the United States. When he first showed his work at ArtExpo in New York in 1996, the reaction was immediate and positive. Robert L. Mooney, Director of the Galleries J.R. Mooney, San Antonio, Texas wrote the following: J.R. Mooney Galleries of Fine Art has had the pleasure of representing the artwork of Samir Sammoun to our collectors in the southwestern U.S. for the last two years. The fresh colorful impressionistic renditions presented in his artwork have been received with unprecedented enthusiasm... Samir is a fresh and exciting talent depicting the landscapes he sees in rich colors with his own wonderfully unique impressionistic style." We can look forward to more from Samir Sammoun, a youthful artist who
has masterfully created his own style and palette. EXHIBITIONS- EXPOSITIONS: Exposition de groupe: Rome, Italy 1993 Centre d'Art Morency: Montréal, Canada April 1994 Museum of St-Joseph Oratory, Montréal Canada March 1996 Art Expo: New Yorl USA. 1996 through 2001 Galerie Klimantiris - Montréal.Canada April 1997 Foundation Les Amis de la CASA- Longueuil, Canada April 1998 Foundation OLO - Quebec, Canada 2000 National Salon of Quebec Art Galleries- Old Montréal, Québec - October 2000. CURICULUM VITAE Samir Sammoun- Samir Sammoun est né dans un village libanais pittoresque, juché sur la montagne Chouf, à 40 km au sud du Beyrouth. Aujourd'hui et plus que jamais, l'artiste a encore des souvenirs inspirants des paysages colorés de son enfance. À l'âge de 21 ans, Samir Sammoun immigre du Liban au Canada où il est diplômé en ingénierie électronique et en télécommunications. Depuis lors, il poursuit sa carrière professionnelle simultanément àsa passion, la peinture. Samir Sammoun a un style et une technique post-impressionniste unique. Grand coloriste et fin observateur de la nature, sa palette est riche d'au delà de 30 tons et nuances. Il travaille principalement sur le jute, un matériel plus lourd et plus fort que la toile traditionnelle de lin. Le Jute peut retenir la pâte généreuse que Samir emploie dans ses fonds. En débutant un tableau, Sammoun prépare soigneusement sa toile avec de la terre de sienne, qu'il applique avec une brosse de soie de porc. Il essuie ensuite l'excédent avec un chiffon pour conserver le grain de la toile. Il utilise cette technique pour créer un impression solide de luminosité. Paysagiste avant tout , Samir Sammoun a un répertoire énorme de thèmes, par exemple des saules, des pommiers en fleur, des champs de blé, des oliviers, des villages, des tempêtes, des scènes de rue etc. Ses peintures reflètent la joie de vivre et la sérénité. C'est l'art d'un homme heureux. Il commente son travail ainsi:,"Je fais en sorte que la personne qui regarde ma peinture sente la couleur du ciel, la température de l'air, la brise dans les pommiers ou les tiges de blé." L'art de Sammoun doit être vu préférablement à une distance de quelques pieds. À première vue, ses peintures semblent floues. C'est seulement à la distance appropriée que la scène apparaît dans toute sa plénitude. L'originalité de Samir Sammoun et son style unique ont retenu l'intérêt des collectionneurs et des amateurs d'art du Canada et des Etats-Unis. Quand il a montré son travail à l'ArtExpo de New York en 1996, la réaction fut immédiate et positive. Robert L. Mooney, Directeur des Galeries J.R. Mooney, San Antonio, Texas, écrit ce qui suit: "J'ai eu le plaisir de présenter Samir Sammoun à nos collectionneurs du sud-ouest des Etats-Unis pendant les deux dernières années. Ses interprétations impressionnistes colorées remplies de fraîcheur ont été accueillies avec un enthousiasme sans précédent... Samir a une vision neuve du paysage avec un style qui lui est propre." Samir Sammoun, un jeune artiste qui n'a pas fini de nous étonner. Il a des oeuvres en permanence à la Galerie "La Maison Richelieu".
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Rue, Saint-Denis, 34" X 48"
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Carré Philippe sous la neige, Montréal
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Place Jacques-Cartier,
30" X 36" |
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