Background and early artistry Muis was born on 22 October 1914 to a
Protestant christian family in
Baarn, in the central
Netherlands, as the youngest and only boy out of three children. He became interested in painting and music around the age of seven and encouraged by his father, a
Chief Accountant of a gas factory, he took lessons in both drawing and music. After leaving secondary school in
Hilversum, Muis faced painting while abandoning music. In 1931, he joined an art school in
Amsterdam, and subsequently an Academy of Fine Arts in Amsterdam, Netherlands, in July 1934. He studied drawing and painting until 1935, when he left for France and was influenced by the paintings of
Jules Breton as well as
Giotto in 1937, when he visited Italy's
Florence, Venice, and
Pompei. He also took Monumental Art tutorials and thus, became specialized in wall painting from that year until 1938.
Exhibition and breakthrough Muis completed his first
mural painting, a state commission for the Dutch Pavilion at the
World Exhibition in Paris. In 1939, he worked with architects for the Tuyen Luchtvaart Laboratorium in Amsterdam and focused on
easel painting in his studio in
Amstel, Amsterdam. He made his first exhibition in Amsterdam (
gouache, oil on wood) at Galerie Robert, Amsterdam in May 1940. After two years, he participated in an exhibition of young
avant-garde painters in Amsterdam, a demonstration which was forcibly condemned by the
Nazis. He exhibited in
Groningen, Netherlands, in 1946 and 1947 at Galerie De Boer. He participated in the 1948 group exhibition in
Rotterdam and in the same year, painted three frescoes entitled "The Mourners". The painting was in the entrance hall of the Oosterbegraafplaats, a cemetery in Amsterdam which was commissioned by the
municipality of Amsterdam. He has also participated in the
Venice Biennale and exhibited in Amsterdam, Groningen and
Rotterdam in 1949. Muis settled with his family in
Port-Vendres, France. In 1952, he made a wall painting for the Auditorium Oosterbegraafplaats in Amsterdam: "Arcadia" of Mediterranean-inspiration (from sketches done in Park Vilmarest in
Argelès-sur-Mer). In 1955 he exhibited in
Utrecht and produced a mural painting at the
University of Groningen entitled "Waterfowl". The
Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam acquired some of his works, including his "Palm Tree" drawing for the Rijksmuseum Prenten Cabinet and also his gouache, "Still Life with Fish", and oils on canvas. In 1956, he received a prize in painting completion by K.N.S.M., a Dutch shipping company. In 1957, he also exhibited in Gallery Bassano, France and also travelled to the Netherlands to achieve the "Four Elements", a mural painting for The Atom exhibition in
Schiphol. He completed his two murals "Narcissus" in Spinoza Lyceum,Amsterdam and "Theseus and Ariadne's thread", also in Amsterdam. The two wall paintings were created from the numerous sketches he made in the Roussillon countryside, on the banks of Tech, near Arles sur Tech. Since then, Muis has exhibited his artworks in Galerie Barbizon, Paris (1960), Grand Café de Ceret (1962) and Perpignan (Salle Arago) (1961 and 1966). From 1970 to 1971, his works were also displayed in
Florence, Italy, Gallery Paolo Vaccerino. The Cultural Center in Bellefontaine Mirail,
Toulouse, presented his works in 1972 and at the 'Salon des Indépendants' in Paris in 1973 and 1974. It was followed by "Club of Law and Economics", an artwork exhibited in 'Place des Invalides', Paris. In 1978, he had an exhibition of his works in
Singer Museum, Laren. == Later life and death ==