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Large colour lithograph (9/145) by the Belgian painter Maurice Schelck (1906-1987), entitled 'The Harvester'. We see a typical peasant scene by Schelck that is strongly reminiscent of the figures of Permeke. Signed and numbered by the master, also signed in the plate. Professionally framed behind glass.
Maurice Schelck (Aalst, 1906 - Ghent, 1978) was a Flemish painter. He studied at the art academies of Aalst, Brussels, Paris and Rome. He painted rural scenes, village figures, portraits and still lifes, and also ventured into abstracted landscapes. In his graphic work, his monumental figures are reminiscent of Henri Permeke and Frits van den Berghe. Schelck became a leading figure in the artist village of Sint-Martens-Latem since 1960, when he moved there from Aalst to "Huize ten Wolken Jager", because he wanted to feel at the source of Flemish expressionism in this magical place. Schelck is considered, together with Hubert Malfait and Vic Dooms, as one of the last followers of the Latem School. His works are in museums in Antwerp, Ostend, Aalst, Milan and Montevideo, as well as in many private collections in Europe and America (USA, Canada, Uruguay).