ARTFEED — Contemporary Art Intelligence

Eugène Leroy's Layered Paintings Explored in Artpress Interview

publication · 2026-04-23

In an interview published in Artpress, Eugène Leroy discusses his painting practice, rejecting the label of abstract painter and citing influences from Rembrandt, Giotto, and Toulouse-Lautrec. His works feature extraordinary layers of paint, nets, interlacings, and bursts. Alain Buisine questions Leroy on his fidelity to painting models and the idea that abstract art inevitably resembles its model.

Key facts

  • Eugène Leroy refuses to be considered an abstract painter.
  • He cites Rembrandt, Giotto, and Toulouse-Lautrec as major influences.
  • His paintings consist of superimposed strata of paint, nets, interlacings, and bursts.
  • Alain Buisine conducted the interview.
  • The interview was published in Artpress.
  • The interview date is October 1991.
  • Leroy discusses fidelity to his painting models.
  • The conversation touches on abstract art's resemblance to its model.

Entities

Artists

  • Eugène Leroy
  • Rembrandt
  • Giotto
  • Toulouse-Lautrec
  • Alain Buisine

Institutions

  • Artpress

Sources