• Home
  • About
  • News
  • Contact
The Scottish Gallery
  • Exhibitions
  • Events
  • Artists
  • Films
  • Viewing Rooms
  • Publications
  • Exhibitions
  • Events
  • Artists
  • Films
  • Viewing Rooms
  • Publications
Close
Home / Artworks / Still Life with Teapot
  • Henri Hayden

Still Life with Teapot, 1970

lithograph
H:55cm W:73cm

framed dimensions: 72.5 x 90.5 cm

signed lower right
edition 9 of 195

Hayden’s works are held in museum collections worldwide, including the Tate Modern in London, The Museum of Modern Art in New York, The Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh and the Centre Pompidou in Paris.

£950
Buy Now
Still Life with Teapot.

    Related Items

    • Alison McGill

    Abstract Aerial View, 1998

    monotype
    H:50cm W:50cm
    View Details
    • Anne Redpath

    Canaries, c.1960

    oil on board
    H:36cm W:45cm
    View Details
    • William Wilson

    A Street in Paris

    watercolour and ink
    H:73cm W:89cm
    View Details

    Henri Hayden

    Born: 1883
    Place of Birth: Warsaw
    Died: 1970

    Henri Hayden was a School of Paris painter, mainly of still life and landscape. Hayden was born in Warsaw and studied engineering at Warsaw Polytechnic from 1902. Alongside this he studied painting at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and, in 1905, decided to devote himself entirely to painting.

    Hayden moved to Paris in 1907, then a hotbed for the European artists of his generation, and briefly studied at the art school La Palette. He travelled to Brittany most summers from 1909-18 to paint in its unique light, including Le Pouldu and Pont Aven. His first solo exhibition was at the Galerie Druet, Paris, in 1911. He was influenced by Cézanne, whose ground breaking retrospective had been shown in the city the same year Hayden had arrived, and decided to join the Cubist movement (1915-21) where he became friends with the small circle including Braque, Gris, Lipchitz and Picasso. In 1916 the exclusive Cubist dealer, Leonce Rosenberg, brought Hayden under contract.

    Becoming tired with the movement in 1922, Hayden reacted against Cubism and returned to the direct study of nature. He continued to exhibit in France, including a number of solo shows. During the German Occupation, Hayden took refuge in the South of France and, on returning to Paris in 1944, found his studio and much of his work destroyed. Hayden bought a country house in 1962, near La Ferté-sous-Jouarre, and immersed himself in area, using its landscape views and places as the subjects for his paintings. For many years, Hayden was represented in London by Waddington Galleries. His works are in the collections of Musee d’Art Moderne, Paris; Petit Palais, Paris; Stockholm Museum; Budapest Musem; Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia.

    Gift Card

    Struggling to find that perfect gift? We have the solution! A Scottish Gallery Gift Voucher is the perfect gift for friends, family, customers and colleagues.

    Buy a Gift Card
    Own Art

    Own Art is a national initiative that makes buying contemporary art and craft affordable by providing interest-free credit for the purchase of original work.

    Find out more

    Join our mailing list

    Sign up to receive the latest art news from The Scottish Gallery including forthcoming exhibitions, films, podcasts, blogs, events and more.

    The Scottish Gallery

    16 Dundas Street
    Edinburgh
    EH3 6HZ

    Map & Directions

    T: (+44) 0131 558 1200
    E: mail@scottish-gallery.co.uk

    Opening Times


    • Monday: by appointment
    • Tuesday to Friday: 10.30am – 6pm
    • Saturday: 11am – 2pm

    Please note that The Scottish Gallery spans two floors, accessible only by sets of stairs, and our Garden is open only in fair weather.

    The Gallery will be closed to the public from Monday 5 May, re-opening with our new programme of exhibitions on Thursday 8 May.


    • My Account
    • Privacy Policy
    HFG
    Registered as Aitken Dott Ltd.