In Tate Britain
Biography
Henri Hayden, born Henryk Hayden (December 24, 1883 – May 12, 1970), was a Polish painter. Born in Warsaw, Hayden lived and worked in Paris. Hayden studied engineering at the Warsaw Polytechnic from 1902 to 1905, while simultaneously pursuing studies at the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts and eventually moved to France in 1907.
In Paris, he became acquainted with the artists associated with the Ecole de Paris and later raised to prominence as a Cubist painter. Hayden said that "I only absorbed Cubism in 1915, after having swallowed and digested all of French painting in a few years. This rapid absorption led me, in a spirit of creative synthesis, without even realising, to Picasso and Braque's experimentation at the time." His first exhibition took place at the Galerie Druet in 1911. One of Hayden's first dealers was Leonce Rosenberg, who organised an exhibition of his works in 1919.
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Read full Wikipedia entryArtworks
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Henri Hayden Bottle and Fruit
1968 -
Henri Hayden The Red Hill
1968 -
Henri Hayden Fay-le-Bac
1968 -
Henri Hayden Brown Still Life
1968 -
Henri Hayden Blue Landscape
1968 -
Henri Hayden Green Landscape
1968 -
Henri Hayden Black Vase
1968 -
Henri Hayden The Sun
1968