ABOUT GUY BUFFET

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Paris  France 1943

Buffet was commissioned by the Salt Lake Olympic Committee to create the Fun of the Olympic Games.

Following his education at the Beaux Arts de Toulon and the Academie de Peinture de la Ville de Paris, Guy Buffet’s paintings gained international acclaim.  He later served in the French Navy as the official artist, allowing him the opportunity to paint throughout the world and document a wide variety of cultures.  As a young man, Buffet’s work was displayed at the Museum of the French Navy at Toulon.

During Buffet’s travels to Hawaii, he fell in the with cultural history and folklore of the state and its people, so much so that he decided to live there.  His fascination and subsequent move resulted in several commissions and mural work which contributed to his escalating fame.

In 1981, Buffet was invited to travel China as guest of the Peking Arts and Crafts Council and represent his experience through paintings.  The works, entitled Guy Buffet’s China, were later exhibited in Honolulu.

He says of his work, “I invite the viewer to share my experience.  I take you into my world like a guest into my home.  I want you to be comfortable, relaxed, happy, to forget about problems and sorrows.  If you like it and want to come back, my world is yours.”


In 1989, Buffet was internationally recognized for his exhibition with the Monnaie de Paris.  The theme involved the Bicentennial of the French Revolution and the Declaration of the Rights of Man.  It began in Paris, France, and traveled to most major cities in the United States and Canada, concluding in Tokyo, Japan.

Guy Buffet has been honored in many different ways through shows such as Art de Prestige and Lahaina Gallery Exhibits.  As a result of his restaurant series entitled Great Restaurants of America, he was represented by such sponsors as Absolut Vodka, the Westin Hotels, and Grand Marnier.

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