Paul Delvaux (1897–1994) occupies a unique place in the history of modern painting. Neither truly Surrealist nor merely Symbolist, he is one of those rare twentieth-century artists whose universe belongs to him alone, a theatre of nude or draped female figures isolated in deserted architectural landscapes, railway stations emptied of life, ruined Greek temples, or moonlit rooms. Initially influenced by Flemish Expressionists, Delvaux turned away from realism after his discovery of Giorgio de Chirico in 1934, a visual and existential shock. From de Chirico, he retained the empty perspective, the elongated shadow, the architecture as theatre of waiting, but replaced the tragic with a more wistful, melancholic dream. From that moment on, his work opened into an oneiric dimension that unfolded until his death, a world suspended in silence where characters seem both present and absent, as if caught in a dream from which they would never awaken.
His apparent link to Surrealism — reinforced by his proximity to Magritte and his exhibitions within André Breton’s circle — should not mislead. Delvaux was never drawn to provocation or unconscious automatism. On the contrary, he pursued an intimately personal vision where the repetition of motifs — the train, the skeleton, the nude woman, the classical city, the oil lamp — became a kind of visual liturgy, a poetic rite without end. He preferred the murmur of memory to the violence of the subconscious, the shimmer of childhood to the scream of revolt. His world is not one of scandal, but of mystery. We enter it as we enter a lucid dream, eyes open to the quiet strangeness of familiar things.
Today, the market makes no mistake. Major paintings by Paul Delvaux regularly achieve record results at international auctions, surpassing the symbolic thresholds of 3, 5 or even 8 million euros. He stands alongside the leading figures of European modernism, and his auction results reveal a consistent and ascending recognition — rare for such a singular artist. But beyond auction records, it is the internal coherence of his œuvre, its ability to cross time without dissolving into trends, that attracts discerning collectors. His name, at the crossroads of Surrealism and Metaphysical painting, embodies an aesthetic in itself, immediately recognisable yet inexhaustible. To acquire a work by Delvaux, even in the field of printmaking, is to inscribe oneself into a deeper history of twentieth-century art — a history that is acknowledged, exhibited, valued, and still evolving.