Jean Dries is the name used by the artist, Jean Driesbach, who was born on October 19, 1905 in Bar-Le-Duc in Meuse, France and died in Paris on February 26, 1973.
He was a Lorrain painter by birth and was born the year Fauvism appeared at the Salon d'automne.
From 1953 to 1973 he was the curator of the Eugène Boudin Museum in Honfleur which still has some of his works on display.
As Jean Dries believed that art transcended national borders he never stopped travelling outside of France and even Europe.
His admiration for Spanish and Italian masters led him to Spain and Italy.
He painted landscapes, portraits, self-portraits, nudes, still lifes, seascapes, horse races and bullfights.
Although tempted by Impressionism, Cubism and especially Fauvism, he never gave into abstraction or non-figurative art.
In his Blue Notebook he wrote "One cannot do without nature.
One must neither torture it or oneself." He was a great colorist while remaining attentive to the balance of composition.