bg Vidin

Jules Pascin House

- Ulitsa Tsar Asen I 28 -
The single-story building was built somewhere in the 19th century and it became known as it's the maternal home of the Bulgarian artist Jules Pascin, who was born there on March 31, 1885. He was born as the eighth of eleven children, to the Sephardic Jewish family of the grain merchant Marcus and Sophie Pincas. Originally from , the Pincas family was one of the wealthiest in Vidin, they bought and exported wheat, rice, maize and sunflower. In 1892, he moved with his parents to , where his father opened a grain company. Jules worked briefly for his father's firm at the age of fifteen but also frequented a local brothel where he made his earliest drawings. His first artistic training was in in 1902 at age seventeen, and in 1903 he relocated to , where he studied at Moritz Heymann's academy. In 1905 he began contributing drawings to Simplicissimus, a satirical magazine published in Munich. Because his father objected to the family name being associated with these drawings, the 20-year-old artist adopted the pseudonym Pascin with his father's permission.
Jules Pascin in his mother Sophie's hands and his father and some of his brothers and sisters
In December 1905, Jules moved to , becoming part of the great migration of artists to that city at the start of the 20th century. He exhibited his works in commercial galleries, in the , the , the exhibitions of the Secession, and at the Sonderbund-Ausstellung in . Jules wanted to become a serious painter, but in time he became deeply depressed over his inability to achieve critical success with his efforts. Dissatisfied with his slow progress in the new medium, he studied the art of drawing at the and painted copies after the masters in the . He exhibited in the United States for the first time in 1913, when twelve of his works were shown at the in . Pascin relocated to London at the outbreak of the to avoid service in the Bulgarian army and left for the United States on October 3, 1914. In 1918, Jules got married to at City Hall in New York, and in September 1920, Pascin became a naturalized United States citizen. Jules struggled with depression and alcoholism, and he died by suicide at the age of 45, on June 5, 1930, in Paris. The building in which Jules Pascin was born was destroyed in the middle of the 20th century.
Jules Pascin
The Eclectic building was embellished with two , and underneath one of them, a strip of was placed. The were decorated with a , and in one case even with a . The four , which could be seen next to the windows, were all crowned with an Ionic .
Self portrait