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57.  North African Parade


          Artist: Felix Joseph BOUCHOR, French, (1853-1937)
          Execution date (approximate): 1916
          Téchnique: Oil on Canvas, (signed lower right)
          Measures: 38 x 46 cm.
          Description: A Crowd Parading with colorful Flags to celebrate a Moroccan Festival. A
          vibrant and colored image of an excitement scene or a parade in the village, showing
          BOUCHOR at his best.


          Provenance: the Forbes Collection, (Palace in Tangiers-Morocco).


          Exhibition
          Work of Art stored in private


          Publications
          Paintings of Bouchor  Musee d’Orsay in Paris


          Biography
          Joseph-Félix Bouchor was a French painter born in Paris. He studied at the Beaux Arts
          and exhibited at the Salon des Artistes Français in 1878. After seeing action during World
          War I and depicting scenes from the front line, he traveled to North Africa. The present
          painting was in the Collection of Forbes. It depicts a Moroccan Festival from this period,
          and shows Bouchor at his best. He illustrates the hustle and bustle of a village parade,
          infusing the painting with light, vibrant colours and capturing the scene of excitement
          in the village. It is a true snapshot of community life. He painted the frame of the actual
          painting himself (he actually used to do so to many of his paintings). His works can be
          found in many public collections, namely Musée D’Orsay in Paris, and in the Museum of
          Beaux Arts in Marseille, Angers, Vannes and Nantes.

































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