Overview
James Coignard took an active part in the movement called "the Paris School." He later moved on and came into his own distinguishing himself by the uniqueness of his oeuvre. He had an important career in the U.S. after his first exhibition in New York in 1957. He gained in prestige and became well-known in Germany, Italy, Sweden and Denmark--as one of the most important French artists of his generation. This study of the artist tries to establish the complex arrangement of a work whose beauty and formal qualities participate in the "immense palimpsest' of our modern culture. Marcelin Pleynet presents the art pieces in an analysis of order and multiplicity of signs that establish the picture space where each painting founds its own poetic world.