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Writer's pictureUğur İNAN

Auguste Levêque

Auguste Levêque (1866 – 1921) was a Belgian painter influenced both by realism and symbolism. Levêque was also a sculptor, poet and art theoretician.

Levêque was born in Nivelles, Walloon Brabant. He studied under Jean-François Portaels at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, and received the Prix Godecharle for his painting Job in 1890.

Levêque was a member of the "Salon d'Art Idéaliste", formed by Jean Delville in Brussels in 1896, which is considered the Belgian equivalent to the Parisian Rose & Cross Salon. Other members of the group were Léon Frédéric, Albert Ciamberlani, Constant Montald, Emile Motte, Victor Rousseau, Armand Point and Alexandre Séon. The Salon was abandoned in 1898.[1] He died in Saint-Josse-ten-Noode.




Notable paintings

  • Job

  • Les Dentelles d'airain

  • Panthéra et Vipérena

  • Mater dolorosa

  • Circé

  • Dante

  • Parque

  • Repos

  • Ouvriers tragiques

  • Triomphe de la Mort

  • Moisson future

  • Hymne d'Amour

  • Repos de Diane

  • Combat de Centaures

  • Portrait d'Edmond Picard (I)

  • Portrait d'Edmond Picard (II)


Notable sculptures


  • Fin de Sodome

  • Triomphe de la Vigne

  • Combat d'amazones

  • Vision païenne

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