Firmin Baes was born into an artistic family of framers, decorators, and architects in Brussels.[1] His father Henri Baes (1850-1920) was a decorative painter and teacher at the Brussels Academy,...
Firmin Baes was born into an artistic family of framers, decorators, and architects in Brussels.[1] His father Henri Baes (1850-1920) was a decorative painter and teacher at the Brussels Academy, where Firmin studied from 1888 to 1894. Afterwards, he joined La Patte de Dindon, named after the artist’s pub at the Grand Place in Brussels, where he studied with Eugène Laermans and Emile Fabry. While working with his father’s team on large decoration assignments for restaurants and hotels, Firmin met Léon Frédéric (1856-1940), an occasional collaborator, who influenced his artistic development greatly. In 1900, Baes won a bronze medal at the Exposition Universelle in Paris, granting him international recognition. At the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis, he received again the bronze medal. A member of the Belgian artist’s association Pour l’Art from 1908 onwards, Baes exhibited in their salons almost every year throughout his career. Baes joined the Société Royale des Beaux-Arts in 1919, an organization promoting realism and supportive of the Belgian avant-garde.
Baes’s large home and studio in Brussels, where he received visitors and patrons, was filled with his art collection. He worked on a rigid schedule: mornings were for portrait sittings and nude modelling, while afternoons were devoted to still lifes, interiors and landscapes. Baes specialized in highly finished pastels on canvas or large paper supports with striking verisimilitude and coloration. In order to adhere the chalky pastel to the canvas support, the artist developed a novel technique.
Baes was a very prolific artist, recording over 1,300 works in his inventory books. Several portraits and landscapes were executed in the Condroz region in the Belgian Ardennes where Baes must have worked over a period of time.
[1] Chantal Lemal-Mengeot, “Firmin Baes”, in: Nouvelle Biographie Nationale, Brussels 2001, Vol. 6, pp. 17-18