Works
  • Jeanne Soubourou, Green Landscape
    Jeanne Soubourou
    £ 850.00
Biography

Jeanne Soubourou (1879–1968) was a French painter and decorative artist associated with the applied arts tradition of Limoges, where she trained at the École Nationale des Arts Décoratifs. She exhibited at the Salon des Artistes Français from the early twentieth century, establishing a reputation for finely executed works that bridged fine art and decorative enamel practice.

Soubourou is particularly noted for her work in champlevé and polychrome enamel on copper, a medium closely linked to the historic Limoges tradition. Her compositions often combine symbolic, mythological and allegorical subject matter with a strong decorative sensibility, reflecting the broader influence of Art Nouveau and Symbolism in France at the turn of the century.

 

Her work was shown in leading French exhibitions, including major decorative arts salons in the 1910s and 1920s, where she exhibited alongside other practitioners of the Limoges enamel revival. She is recorded as having been active in both fine and decorative arts circles during this period, contributing to the continued prominence of enamel work as a respected artistic discipline in early twentieth-century France.

 

Today, Jeanne Soubourou is best known for her distinctive enamel panels, which are increasingly appreciated by collectors for their rarity, craftsmanship and richly atmospheric imagery. Her works remain sought after within the field of French decorative arts, where they stand as elegant examples of the Limoges enamel tradition.