Jean Hélion (born April 21, 1904, Couterne, Orne, France—died October 27, 1987, Paris) was a French painter who was noted for his abstract paintings.
Hélion initially studied engineering and architecture in Lille, France, and then went to Paris in 1921, where he became interested in painting. Until 1925 he supported himself by working for an architecture firm, while painting in a naturalistic style during his spare time. After the painter Joaquín Torres-García introduced him to Cubism in the mid 1920s, Hélion adopted abstraction in his own painting. In 1931 he was one of the founders of Abstraction-Création, an international association of artists who advocated pure abstraction. Hélion became a leading figure in French nonobjective painting in the 1930s with his sophisticated compositions of large, oddly curving planes arranged in sequences against a background of flat colour. These paintings are notable for their subtle harmonies of cool and pastel colours and for the mechanistic connotations of their monumental shapes.
Upon the outbreak of World War II, Hélion enlisted in the French army in 1940. He was taken prisoner by the Germans; a memoir detailing his captivity and escape, They Shall Not Have Me, was published in 1943. After the war, Hélion abandoned pure abstraction in his work. He began using figurative elements in his paintings and eventually became a somewhat mannered painter of scenes from everyday life.