Leo Van Paemel
Leo Joris Van Paemel was a Flemish artist.
Life
Early years
Leo van Paemel and his twin brother, Willy, were born in Blankenberge. Leo himself said that he had always painted for as long as he could remember. Paintings survive from 1927, produced by van Paemel in Lissewege, Uitkerke and the former fishing port of Blankenberge. At that time he was just 13 years old and a student at the State Middle School in Blankenberge where his artistic talent was identified and encouraged, earning him privileges including the right to have his paintings used to decorated the walls of the school's covered play area.Leo's uncle was the artist Jules Van Paemel, who did much to support the nephew's talent. Leo regularly accompanied his uncle across the polders around Uitkerke, Lissewege, Zuienkerke and Dudzele, and it was on these expeditions that Leo received his first lessons in painting.
Between 1929 and 1934 van Paemel studied in Antwerp at the Fine Arts Academy where he won a succession of prizes, gaining a place as a student at the institution's upper school where he remained till 1940, becoming a star pupil of the influential artist Isidore Opsomer. His contemporaries included Jan Cox, Jack Godderis, René De Coninck, Mark Macken, Mark Mendelson and, from Bruges in his own region, Luc Peire and Luc De Jaegher. Leo van Paemel nevertheless was an artist who followed his own path rather than becoming a member of some wider artistic trend or grouping.