Charles Crupelandt (23 October 1886, Wattrelos, Nord - 18 February 1955, Roubaix) was a French professional road bicycle racer.
He won stages in the Tour de France, but his biggest successes were the 1912 and 1914 Paris–Roubaix.
The last cobbled section (300m) of the race, just before the velodrome, is named Espace Charles Crupelandt.
In 1912 Charles Crupelandt became the subject of a painting by the Cubist artist and theorist Jean Metzinger.
Metzinger's painting was the first in Modernist art to represent a specific sporting event and its champion.
He incorporated into the painting his concepts of multiple perspective, simultaneity, and time, according to his belief that the fourth dimension was crucial to the new art that could compete with the classical French tradition.
The painting was acquired by Peggy Guggenheim in 1945 and is now permanently on view in the Peggy Guggenheim Collection museum in Venice.Crupelandt went to war and returned a hero, with the Croix de Guerre.
Three years into peace, however, he fell foul of the law and was found guilty.