Jules Chapon
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Jules Chapon (4 September 1914 – 6 January 2007) was a Dutch artist who moved to France in 1973.


Biography

Jules was born in Heemstede as the son of Barend Chapon, an Amsterdam stockbroker who was a member of the Heemstede city council as well as boardmember of the Haarlem Jewish community. His father became a member of the newly formed Heemstede building society Tuinwijk Zuid in 1918 and moved there when this project, designed by the architect J.B. van Loghem, was completed in 1923. One of Jules' first paintings of the back gardens of these houses was probably painted from his bedroom window. Though Chapon first began a career at the brokerage of his father, he took painting lessons from
Kees Verwey Kees Verwey (April 20, 1900 – July 23, 1995) was a Dutch painter who was productive well into old age. Biography He was born in Amsterdam and was the nephew of the poet Albert Verwey and the architect Hendrik Petrus Berlage. According to t ...
.


War years

His father was picked up and was executed by the Germans on 2 February 1943 along with 9 other innocent victims as retaliation for the murder of a German officer on the Verspronckweg on 30 January. This execution virtually wiped out the remaining leaders of the Jewish Community in Haarlem. Jules fled through the backyard when the rest of his family was picked up for deportation the same day. His mother, brother, and two sisters were brought via the
Hollandsche Schouwburg Hollandsche Schouwburg (; English: Hollandic Theatre) is a museum in Amsterdam in the Netherlands. History Originally, the Hollandsche Schouwburg was a Dutch theatre, but it was deemed a Jewish theatre in 1941 by Nazi occupiers, and it was later ...
and
Westerbork Camp Westerbork ( nl, Kamp Westerbork, german: Durchgangslager Westerbork, Drents: ''Börker Kamp; Kamp Westerbörk'' ), also known as Westerbork transit camp, was a Nazi transit camp in the province of Drenthe in the Northeastern Netherlands, ...
to Auschwitz where they were killed. Only Jules and his sister Selma, who had been working that day, survived the war. After the war they returned to their house in Tuinwijk Zuid, which had been occupied by Jan Nederkoorn, the same man who had denounced his father and been the direct cause for the deaths of his mother and siblings. After the war Nederkoorn was tried and received the death sentence for war crimes, but only served five years. When the wife of this man came calling in the company of a police officer to collect belongings she claimed to have left behind, Jules' sister slammed the door in her face.


Career as artist

Jules had sketched during the war to while away the time in hiding and afterwards he became an artist full-time. He took lessons from
Henri Frédéric Boot Henri Frédéric Boot (1877, Maastricht – 1963, Haarlem), was a Dutch painter and printmaker mostly active in Haarlem. Biography According to the RKD he was a pupil of the painters Dirk Gerard Ezerman, Alexander Henri Robert van Maasdij ...
who lived across the street from the workshop he purchased to double as a gallery and in 1950 he had his first public exhibition in the Huis van Looy.list of exhibitions
at the Huis van Looy According to the RKD besides being a pupil of Boot and Verwey, Chapon became a member of the Haarlem artist society
De Groep Kunst zij ons doel, or KZOD, (English: ''Art be our aim'') is the name of an artists club in the Waag, Haarlem. History The Society was founded in 1821 as the continuation of the ' Haarlemse Teekenacademie', established in 1772 by Cornelis van ...
in 1951.Jules Chapon
in the RKD
In 1957 his wife Polly turned his informal art gallery into Galerie Espace, by partnering with
Eva Bendien Eva Bendien (1921–2000), was a Dutch art collector and art gallery owner. Biography She was born in Arnhem as the daughter of an English teacher, and on her mother's side was the niece of the abstract painters Jacob Bendien and Paul Citroen. Aft ...
who brought sales experience and a network of connections in the art world of the time. Jules participated in more art shows in 1952, 1959, and 1962, but began creating large-scale monumental works that would not fit into a gallery and were usually created where they were commissioned. His wife left him in 1963 to start another art gallery in Brussels. In 1973 he emigrated to France where he married a second time and lived in Aquitaine until he died.


References


Jules Chapon
on
Artnet Artnet.com is an art market website. It is operated by Artnet Worldwide Corporation, which has headquarters in New York City, in the United States, and is owned by Artnet AG, a German publicly traded company based in Berlin that is listed on t ...

Biography Jules Chapon
at the Joods Historisch Museum
Jules Chapon
on website of Heemstede historian and journalist Wim de Wagt
Film fragment 1 februari 1967
from Polygoon journaal over Jules Chapon's monumental steel and glass construction for the Nederlandsche Dok en Scheepsbouw Maatschappij
Film fragment 2 februari 1946
– Haarlem remembers the retaliation on three-year-anniversary
Haarlem in WWII – Retaliation
in North Holland Archives {{DEFAULTSORT:Chapon, Jules 1914 births 2007 deaths Dutch male sculptors People from Heemstede People from Aquitaine 20th-century Dutch sculptors 20th-century Dutch painters Dutch male painters Dutch emigrants to France 20th-century Dutch male artists