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François PEETERS
François PEETERS was born in Mortsel,
Belgium on May 17, 1941, but he has lived for
almost 30 years in Battel, near Malines,
Belgium. It was written in the stars that
someday he would excel in art, as the painting
talent has been in his family for generations,
and seems to be handed down to male descendents.
Only a few paintings of his ancestors still
exist. Amongst them, two remarquable paintings
of his father, Frans PEETERS (1916-1987),
painted with common watercolour, and fixed with
sugared water, a technique he had developed on
his own.

Move the mousepointer over the paintings to see more details
He never had the opportunity to enroll in art education
because he started working at a young age to help support
his family. His dream: to become a carpenter, which
encouraged him to take evening classes in a cabinet making
course. Apparently, without realizing it, the pyrography bug
was already in his blood.
Just like his father and uncle before him, he started
drawing and painting. At the end of the 1960s, he exhibits
some of his paintings and acquarels. To see some of his
paintings, click
<HERE>.

In 1970,
rather by coincidence, he met an older pyrographer who was
presenting his art to the public at an arts-and-crafts fair.
The smell of burnt wood attracted him and his passion for
pyrography was born. François Peeters had plenty of
experience with wood crafts and has drawing talent. He felt
that pyrography was the artistic field where he could feel
completely at home as an artist.
François Peeters is still thankful to this unknown
pyrographer who taught him the basic principles of the art,
and of whom he only has one photograph (see below). He never
even knew his name.

In the
following years, he perfected himself in all facets of
pyrography: he learned how to use markers to obtain special
effects, he experimented with all styles of pyrography
(among others relief and color).
The last couple of years, he has limited himself to pen
drawings and pyrography: heads of children, faces of elderly
people, animals, and mushrooms are his favorite subjects, as
you can see from his picture album on this site where
examples of his work are displayed.

But
François Peeters is also an enthusiastic artist outside of
pyrography and painting: the back of a washing machine
suddenly becomes a mould to pour decorative stones, roof
toptiles are covered with a polyester top and transformed
into a stunning mailbox, old bottles are blended into a
beautiful wall decoration.

However,
pyrography remains the most important art in his life: he
shows his work at exhibitions and fairs, demonstrates his
talent, and answers every question about pyrography.

Pyrography
is still a hobby for François Peeters. He enjoys creating
his art for his family and friends. But his work is not only
sought after in Belgium. Various foreign visitors, who
discovered pyrography through a visit to an arts-and-crafts
fair, have taken with them as a memory of our country one or
other art work to among others Norway, Hungary, Wales, and
even further to South Africa and Houston, Texas in the
United States. One of the “baby bottle piggy-banks” even
made its way to the American actress Linda Hamilton through
her fan club!
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