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American Modernist Masterworks from the Vilcek Foundation

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 Venues:

Philbrook Museum of Art  (Tulsa, Okla.) February 8 - May 3, 2015

Phoenix Art Museum 

Georgia O’Keeffe Museum of Art

 

Philbrook Museum of Art debuts From New York to New Mexico: Masterworks of American Modernism from the Vilcek Foundation Collection .

Organized by Philbrook Chief Curator and Curator of American Art Catherine Whitney, this original exhibition explores the fertile period in our national story that resulted in the first truly homegrown, modern art movement in America. Drawn from the Vilcek Foundation Collection in New York City, this presentation represents the first time many of these notable works will be accessible to the public. Collectively these works by some of the 20th century’s most innovative and colorful modernists including Georgia O’Keeffe, Stuart Davis, Marsden Hartley, and Arthur Dove, demonstrate how the artists came together under the banner of American identity to create a shared visual language of abstraction. Following its presentation at Philbrook, FromNew York to New Mexico travels to the Phoenix Art Museum and the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum of Art before the collection returns to the Vilcek Foundation Headquarters in New York City.

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With more than 60 masterworks of American modernism ranging from the early 1910s to the Post-War era, the exhibition presents a range of modern stylistic approaches in various media (paintings, sculptures, and works on paper). These American vanguards overthrew traditional painting practices during this watershed period to create a uniquely American visual affinity. From New York to New Mexico emphasizes four main themes: Nature’s Great Unfolding; The Cubist Impulse; Man Made: Town & Country; and Our Western Roots.

The show’s first segment, “Nature’s Great Unfolding,” focuses predominantly upon artists who gathered around art dealer, photographer, and modern art champion, Alfred Stieglitz, during the years prior to and immediately following World War I. Stieglitz’s stable of artists, including O’Keeffe, Hartley, Dove and Max Weber among others, shared a passionate collective interest in the transcendental power of nature. They sought to articulate the sublime qualities of the American landscape through a new visual language of color metaphors and geometric equivalents.  Examples from the exhibition include



 O’Keeffe’s velvety red Lake George–Autumn, 1922, which suggests the dramatic unfurling of autumn foliage.



Dove’s vertiginous Below the Flood Gates-Huntington Harbor, 1930, employs eddying, swirling forms to evoke the crashing sounds and tension of a rushing stream. These important paintings, along with



Hartley’s highly mystical Portrait Arrangement No. 2, 1912-13, form the backbone of the Vilcek collection and represent a sampling of vibrant expressions by some Stieglitz Circle all-stars.

The second section of the exhibition, “The Cubist Impulse,” examines American artists’ interpretation of form and dynamic movement through their use of early 20th century aesthetic and scientific theory. Cubism, which originated in Paris in 1908 through the advances of Pablo Picasso and George Braque, was one such revolutionary innovation appropriated by American artists. This style irreversibly changed perception and image-making by fracturing form and space into shifting planes and multiple viewpoints.  Max Weber was one of the first American artists to apply the lessons of European cubism to New York scenes and subjects as seen in his early



Still Life with Bananas, 1909.

Other American pioneers made the cubist movement their own through unique color applications and object selections as exemplified in Stanton Macdonald-Wright’s Synchromist abstraction, Gestation #3, 1963, a glowing example of the artist’s decades-long commitment to a style he co-originated in 1912. This section of the exhibition reunites three of the four 1922 still lifes by Davis,  



Still Life with Dial, 



 Still Life, Brown, 




 and Still Life, Red,   

 which the artist described as “rigorously…American.”


Jazz, skyscrapers, the Brooklyn Bridge, and shipyards all inspired the exhibition’s third section, “Man Made: Town & Country.” This section examines the urban and rural architectural motifs underlying the modernists’ understanding of form, space and structure. American progress and industry in the modern city are celebrated in select works like



Joseph Stella’s Brooklyn Bridge Abstraction, c. 1918-19



and John Storrs’s shiny sculptural abstraction Study in Pure Form, c. 1924.

Rural retreats and suburban habitats are similarly glorified in



George Copeland Ault’s Driveway: Newark, 1931



and Dove’s The Green House, 1934.

The exhibition’s final section, “Our Western Roots” explores how the American Southwest served as a spiritual oasis for many East coast artists who sought a deeper connection to nature and to their mythic American pasts following the devastation of World War I. This grouping includes the bold, v-shaped landscapes by O’Keeffe from her Black Place and Patio Door series, as well as two, throbbing red-earth recollections by Hartley, who painted them from memory while overseas. Still lifes and figural compositions inspired by Native American material culture, dance, and spiritual traditions by Stuart Davis and early Santa Fe adventurer, Jan Matulka, are also a highlight of this section.

From New York to New Mexico: Masterworks of American Modernism from the Vilcek Foundation Collection remains on view through Sunday,  at Philbrook Museum of Art, after which it will travel to Phoenix Museum of Art and Georgia O’Keefe Museum of Art in Santa Fe. Finally these works will move into their long-term home at the Vilcek Foundation, which is scheduled to open in 2016 in New York City.

Kazimir Malevich at Auction

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Sotheby’s November 3, 2008 



On the evening of November 3, 2008, Sotheby’s presented for sale, Suprematist Composition from 1916 by Kazimir Malevich, a work renowned as a premier painting from one of the most sophisticated and innovative artistic movements of the 20thcentury. Regarded as an icon of Russian art and a paradigmatic example of the 20thcentury avant-garde, the masterwork was executed in 1916, the same year that Malevich published his Suprematist Manifesto. The painting had been featured in the collection of the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam for the past fifty years before being restituted to the artist’s family. It has been included in every major exhibition of Malevich’s work ever mounted – both inside Russia and abroad, and was selected by the artist for his first ever exhibition to a Western audience in 1927. It sold for $60 million.

Suprematist Composition is a magnificent modern work of art of enormous art historical importance and cultural resonance,” said Emmanuel Di-Donna, Vice Chairman, Impressionist and Modern Art Worldwide and Head of Sotheby’s Evening Sales, New York. “It ranks amongst the finest paintings of the 20thCentury, on a par with the best paintings of modern masters such as Picasso, Rothko, Pollock and de Kooning that have ever come up for sale either at auction or privately. Never has a work by the artist of such significance, lyricism and vibrancy appeared on the market and it is a great privilege for Sotheby’s to be offering it at auction in November.” 

A brilliant constellation of geometry and color in space, Suprematist Composition embodies what Malevich considered to be the pinnacle of artistic expression. As he did with his other major compositions from1915-16, the artist’s primary mode of expression here is an assemblyof shapes and colors, plotted systematically on canvas. 

“Color and texture in painting are ends in themselves,” he wrote in his 1916 treatise. Suprematism was rooted in Malevich’s desire to move beyond traditional representation towards an art of pure color and geometric form. While this radical idea had its origins in Cubism and Futurism, Suprematism proposed something new in that it rejected a subjective basis or theme. 

Jo Vickery, Senior Director and Head of Sotheby’s Russian Art Department, London, commented, “With the sale of Malevich's 1916 Suprematist Composition, it feels as though history has come full circle: we have a blazing debut of early Suprematist art at the top of the international art market. It’s an historical moment of a personal dimension for the artist's family, and for us all a chance toreconsider Malevich's unique contribution to art history. He dreamt of creating a kind of art which would speak to all nations equally and his pioneering abstract paintings cut through old ways of defining art, as well as breaking downpolitical and national boundaries.” 

Suprematist Composition made its debut in one of the first important shows of the artist’s work at the 16thState Exhibition in Moscow in 1919-20, which established Malevich as one of the most influential artists of his era. In 1927, the Malevich accompanied this picture to exhibitions in Warsaw and Berlin, introducing Western Europe to the unprecedented aesthetic that he had devised. 

In June 1927, the artist was obliged to return to the Soviet Union and arranged for the paintings to be stored in Berlin, but he was prevented from leaving the Soviet Union, where he died in 1935. 

Suprematist Composition was later entrusted to the German architect Hugo Häring, who purportedly sold it to the Stedelijk Museum. It was finally returned to the artist's heirs after a historic settlement was reached with the City of Amsterdam following a 17-year struggle. 

The Heirs of Kazimir Malevich issued a statement through a spokesperson as follows: “The Malevich family is delighted that this masterpiece by our renowned ancestor is being brought to market by Sotheby's. The sale confirms Kazimir Malevich's place in the pantheon of 20th century masters.” 

The genesis of Suprematist painting was preceded by Malevich’s experiences as a young artist of the fledgling Russian avant-garde. In 1907 he was invited to exhibit with notables such as Wassily Kandinsky and Mikhail Larionov Association of Moscow Artists. Around 1914, Malevich became a leader of the Russian Futurist movement, and began taking bolder steps with his painting. Bythe spring and summer of 1915, he finally discarded all reference to figuration in favor of colored, unadorned geometric shapes on a white background and painted strikingly reductive compositions. In 1915, the artist wrote a lengthy treatise about these paintings commonly known as the “Suprematist Manifesto”, which was published in Moscow in 1916. 

Unlike the Soutine and Chagall, who left their native country in search of artistic inspiration in France, Malevich remained in Russia through the turbulent years following the revolution. Born in the Ukraine in 1878, he enrolled in the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture in 1905 and remained in that citythroughout the 1910s. His early paintings from 1910-13 were not without reference to the French avant-garde, and incorporated a variation of the Cubist aesthetic made popular by Picasso and Braque. 

But as his painting developed, Malevich began reinterpreting the styles of Cubism, as well as Italian Futurism, and devised an artistic philosophy that was decidedly his own. Suprematism rejected the idea of objective representation and eliminated any references to nature. The international breakthrough of Malevich’s career did not occur until the seminal 1927 exhibition, Grosse Berliner Kunstausstellung, in which Suprematist Composition was featured alongside seventy other of the artist’s works. 




 SOTHEBY’S MAY 6, 2003



Sotheby’s offered for sale, on behalf of the heirs of Kazimir Malevich, his Suprematist Painting, Rectangle and Circle from1915.

This painting was taken out of Nazi Germany in 1938 to ensure its safety and was brought to the United States by a museum curator. It was subsequently entrusted to the Busch-Reisinger Museum at Harvard University prior to its return to Malevich’s heirs in 1999.

Estimated to sell for $5/7 million, this painting was sold in Sotheby’s May 2003 Part I sale of Impressionist and Modern art. Kazimir Malevich’s Suprematist paintings are among the most compelling works of 20th century art.

Composed of geometric shapes and a limited range of colors, these pictures exalt the beauty of pure form and color. One of the artist’s earliest explorations of this style of painting is Suprematist Painting, Rectangle and Circle, which Malevich completed in 1915 in the midst of writing his “Suprematist Manifesto.”

This work is one of his best known compositions, as it was featured in one of the first important exhibitions of the artist’s work at 16th State Exhibition in Moscow in 1919-20 and also in a retrospective of Malevich’s work in Berlin in 1927. From 1957 to 1999, this work was entrusted to Harvard University’s Busch-Reisinger Museum. With its sharply defined black and blue forms set against a field of white, Malevich considered this composition to be the pinnacle of artistic expression and “the creation of intuitive reason.

As one of Malevich’s premiere Suprematist creations, Suprematist Painting, Rectangle and Circle demonstrates the liberation of form and the celebration of the abstract in an extreme manner that was unmatched by avant-garde artists of the day. Unlike the Russian artists Soutine and Chagall who left their native country in search of artistic inspiration in France, Malevich remained in Russia during the critical period of transformation and revolution and was a key figure in the revival of Russian art and culture during this period.

Born in the Ukraine in 1878, the artist enrolled in the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture in 1905 and remained in that city throughout the 1910s. His early paintings from 1910-13 were not without reference to the French avant-garde, and incorporated a variation of the Cubist aesthetic made popular by Picasso and Braque. But as his painting developed, Malevich began reinterpreting the styles of Cubism, as well as Italian Futurism, and devised an artistic philosophy that was decidedly his own.

Suprematism revered the beauty of speed that had been championed by Futurism and Cubism's fragmenting of objects. In contrast to these two movements, Suprematism rejected the idea of objective representation and eliminated any references to nature.

At the time of Malevich’s death in 1935, Suprematist Painting, Rectangle and Circle was at the Provinzialmuseum (later renamed the Landesmuseum) in Hanover, Germany. Around this time, the National Socialists began censoring avant-garde works of art believed to be “degenerate,”and the present painting was at risk of seizure by the German government. The museum’s director, Alexander Dorner, who was an avid supporter of the Russian avant-garde, was entrusted to save this work and took it with him to the United States in 1938 for safe keeping.

At the time of Dorner’s death in 1957, the picture was left to the Busch-Reisinger Museum at Harvard University with the stipulation that it was to be on “extended loan and to be indicated as such by the museum.” The painting was returned to the Malevich family in 1999.


Sotheby's 2015



LOT SOLD. 5,749,000 GBP 

Sotheby's 2014



LOT SOLD. 2,098,500 GBP



Marc Chagall at Auction

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CHAGALL THROUGH THE DECADES 
SOTHEBY’S TEL AVIV, APRIL 9-12, 2012

The dreamlike world of Marc Chagall, occupied by flying lovers, musicians, circus figures, flowers and animals is a place of intense personal symbolism that is utterly unique. At the same time, his works are deeply rooted in his Jewish and Russian background; indeed, the critic Robert Hughes called him “the quintessential Jewish artist of the twentieth century”. In his Jewish heritage and his lifelong connection with Israel, Chagall found inspiration, friendship, support, patronage, and a deep appreciation among collectors that continues to grow to this day.  

Many of Chagall’s most important projects were conceived or executed in Israel. His first visit, in 1931, followed a commission from the legendary Parisian dealer Ambroise Vollard for a series of illustrations to the Bible. The vivid impression left on him by the country’s landscape and light can be seen not only in these etchings but throughout his oeuvre. By the time Chagall returned to Israel in 1951 for a major retrospective, his work was already widely recognised. In 1962 he attended the unveiling of his twelve stained-glass windows for the synagogue of the Hebrew University’s Hadassah Medical School in Jerusalem; and in 1963 he visited again to develop the iconography of the decoration for the new Knesset building.  

During his final visit to Israel in 1977 the 90-year old Chagall received two awards, an honorary doctorate from the Weizmann Institute of Science, and the title ‘Worthy of Jerusalem’, conferred on him by the city of Jerusalem. These awards were testament to a deep reciprocal relationship that had both inspired Chagall throughout his life and greatly enriched the country’s artistic heritage. Sotheby’s current selling exhibition ‘Chagall Through the Decades’, is the latest expression of that relationship, allowing visitors to Tel Aviv to trace seven decades of this great modern master’s oeuvre. 



MARC CHAGALL LA DANSE 

Executed just one year after Marc Chagall founded the Association des Peinteurs-Gravures in Paris in 1927, the present work is a wonderful example of Chagall’s innovative use of pigment. Marc Chagall was brought up in Vitebsk before the Russian revolution, though he moved back as Director of the Vitebsk Arts Academy from 1918-19. The music of Chagall’s Vitebsk was Jewish folk and consisted of dancing, frivolity and the passionate strains of the violin. Indeed the fiddler is one of his most famous subjects and sums up the poetic, artisanal surroundings of his youth. The present work exudes the joy and poesie of Chagall’s art.




MARC CHAGALL FLEURS ET CORBEILLE DE FRUITS

Like many of his compositions, Chagall combines various vignettes in a single work to weave a complex tapestry of multiple narratives. Susan Compton writes, “When he was younger, Chagall disliked being told that his art was literary or even poetic, because he wanted to suppress narration in his work in favor of the means of expression... throughout his paintings Chagall introduces human beings, who may be arranged in an illogical manner, but who are constant reminders that art is above all a celebration of the humanity of mankind”.

In spite of his distaste for adherence to convention, the present work contains highly recognizable and beloved themes that repeatedly populated both the artist’s imagination and his paintings. Flowers, which dominate the foreground, fascinated Chagall from the late 1920’s onward. The artist was first struck by the charm of flowers in Toulon in 1924; he later claimed that he had not known of flowers in Russia and they therefore came to represent France for him.

The effervescent bursts of colour in the bouquet and the fruit basket add a note of levity to an otherwise somber composition. Life, growth and the cyclical nature of existence are underscored by their presence in the primary picture plane, perhaps a commentary on the scenes that lie deeper within the canvas. Young lovers are frequently featured throughout Chagall’s oeuvre, and comprise among the most important and symbolic of the cast of characters rendered in his paintings. The couple tenderly embraces as they linger on the border of the picture plane. Enveloped in their own world, they belong to neither the genre scene in the foreground nor the landscape behind.

The small village of Vitebsk, the artist’s birthplace in Russia, was most probably the inspiration for the  humble cluster of rooftops set serenely beneath the moon.



MARC CHAGALL
1887-1985
PEINTRE AU DOUBLE-PROFIL
SUR FOND ROUGE


MARC CHAGALL
1887-1985
L’ANE BLEU



MARC CHAGALL
1887-1985
LA FIANCÉE RÊVANT



MARC CHAGALL
1887-1985
LES MARIÉS SOUS LE BALDAQUIN




MARC CHAGALL
1887-1985
ROI DAVID SUR FOND ROSE





MARC CHAGALL
1887-1985
COUPLE SOUS LA PLUIE



MARC CHAGALL
1887-1985
LA NUIT ENCHANTÉE














Christie's Art of The Surreal on 4 February 2015



A beautifully composed painting that dates to a period of great happiness and stability for Marc ChagallJeune fille au cheval, 1927-1929, is offered at auction for the first time, having been acquired by A Private European Family almost 60 years ago (estimate: £2.2-2.8 million, illustrated right). A mirage of surreal and magical lyricism and blissful romance which encompasses Chagall’s favoured themes of love, memory, music and fantasy, Jeune fille au cheval exemplifies the artist’s unique and deeply personal artistic vision. Executed in iridescent, delicate colours and soft brushstrokes, it depicts a woman adorned in flowers sitting atop a horse emerging from a misty blue haze, while an airborne violinist plays across from her, with a rural street scene from Chagall’s beloved hometown, Vitebsk, beyond. 

Chagall’s works from this period have a soothing, gentle atmosphere. Filled with flowers, lovers or fiddlers, they all exude a poetic harmony. In Jeune fille au cheval the components of the composition are unified through the delicate light, rich colours, and tender, romantic mood. The rich blue, dreamlike haze from which the image emerges could have developed from Chagall’s fascination with the French landscape, particularly the Côte d’Azur, which the artist had visited for the first time in 1926, three years before Jeune fille au cheval was painted. The gentle glow of light lends the painting a pictorial cohesion and compositional unity while evoking the fantastical, imaginary context. 

 Sotheby's 2014






LOT SOLD. 1,685,000 USD 


LOT SOLD. 1,445,000 USD
Christie's 


2007










Pr.$2,057,000
2015









Est.. £300,000 - £500,000
($453,900 -$756,500)

2013



Marc Chagall (1887-1985)


PR.$3,749,000                      





                       



2012



















Pr.$16,250

2011


Vincent van Gogh at Auction

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 Sotheby's November 4, 2014 



LOT SOLD. 61,765,000 USD

Sotheby’s will offer Vincent van Gogh’s Still Life, Vase with Daisies and Poppies in its Evening Sale of Impressionist & Modern Art in New York on November 4, 2014. Painted at the home of Dr. Paul Gachet just weeks before the end of Van Gogh’s life, the artist uses the richly-colored bouquet of wildflowers to convey his psychological state at the time – a hallmark of the Expressionist icon. The resulting composition teems with the intense energy, emotion and sensitivity of this creative genius at the height of his short but renowned career. Still Life is one of the few works that Van Gogh sold during his lifetime, and is one of only a handful of great works by the artist to appear at auction in recent decades. The painting comes to auction this November with a pre-sale estimate of $30/50 million. 
 
Simon Shaw, Co-Head of Sotheby’s Worldwide Impressionist & Modern Art Department, commented: “Still Life, Vase with Daisies and Poppies radiates the exuberance and passion found in Van Gogh’s greatest and most coveted works. The vibrant composition captures in sharp relief the intensity of the artist at the height of his mania, only weeks before his tragic end. Still Life has remained in the same private collection for more than two decades, which adds again to its appeal for today’s market. We are privileged to present it to collectors across the globe this autumn.”

Vincent van Gogh painted the present work in June of 1890 in Auvers-sur Oise, the town where he settled following his release from the asylum at St-Rémy that May. Renting a room at the local Ravoux Inn, he spent his days setting up his easel in the fields to paint the scenes of the lush countryside, as well as visiting with his physician, Dr. Gachet.

Still Life was painted at Dr. Gachet's house and presumably came immediately into his possession upon completion. The viewer can imagine Van Gogh walking through the fields on his way to Gachet's, gathering up armfuls of poppies, daisies, cornflowers and sheaves of wheat to squeeze into one of the doctor’s modest vases. In comparison with the more reserved and academic still-lifes that he had completed in Paris in the mid-1880s, the present work evinces a dramatic shift in Van Gogh’s painterly style, characterized by a frenetic energy. The artist was flooded with anxiety in Auvers, and this agitation spilled over onto even his most optimistic canvases. It is in these same fields that Van Gogh would attempt to take his own life, only weeks after painting this work.

Whether Van Gogh gave Still Life to Dr. Gachet in exchange for medical consultation is unknown, but he was certainly dependent upon his brother Theo for money and art supplies at the end of his life. Van Gogh was eager to show his brother – an art dealer – that he could support himself, and he believed that his still lifes would be the most saleable of his compositions.

Still Life is one of the very few paintings sold during Van Gogh’s lifetime. It was acquired by Gaston Alexandre Camentron, a noted collector of Impressionist pictures, who eventually sold it to Paul Cassirer Gallery in 1911. Still Life remained with a series of private collectors in Germany until the mid-1920s, when it made its way to London and eventually to New York – one of the earliest works by the artist to enter the United States – where it was sold by the Knoedler Gallery in 1928 to A. Conger Goodyear. Known as one of the principle founders of the Museum of Modern Art, Goodyear kept this work in his family's private collection. It was eventually gifted in part by the Goodyears to the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, where it was on display for over 30 years before it was sold at the request of the family.


Sotheby’s  Impressionist and Modern Art in London  December 7, 1999






An oil painting by Dutch artist Vincent Van Gogh is the highlight of the inaugural exhibition to mark the opening of Sotheby’s prestigious new Netherlands headquarter saleroom and offices at the De Boelelaan in the southern part of Amsterdam.The painting has been consigned for sale in London in December by a Dutch family. Entitled A Park in Spring, it was acquired by the grandfather of the present owners in 1923.

A Park in Spring represents flowers and trees in a park in Paris in 1887 and is painted in a jewel-like, pointilist style that shows the influence of Seurat and Signac on Van Gogh at this point in his career. Van Gogh had arrived in Paris from Holland the previous year, a move which inspired him to lighten his palette, thus marking a vital step in the evolution of his mature style.

The painting will be offered for sale in Sotheby’s major sale of Impressionist and Modern Art in London on the evening of Tuesday, December 7, 1999. It is estimated at £3-4 million.

A Park in Spring was until recently on temporary loan at The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam where it hung next to its permanent collection. Last year, while the museum underwent renovation, the painting toured America with the museum’s permanent collection. 


Christie's 2014










Pr.£769,250($1,223,108)








Christie's 2011




Christie's  2009

 

GEORGES BRAQUE at AUCTION

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Sotheby's 2014





LOT SOLD. 1,325,000 USD




LOT SOLD. 1,925,000 USD 




LOT SOLD. 2,965,000 USD



Lote. Vendido 149,000 USD


 

LOT SOLD. 34,375 USD



LOT SOLD. 30,000 GBP
 
 

Estimate120,000180,000 GBP

Sotheby’s 1 October through 24 October 2013



Christie's   2015

Christie's 2014







Christie's 2013 




Christie's 2012






Christie's 2011






Christie's 2009






Christie's 2008




 

PR.£1,252,500($2,464,920)

Pierre Bonnard at Auction

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SOTHEBY'S Impressionist and Modern Art February 4, 2003 



Perhaps the greatest masterpiece of French art in the sale is Pierre Bonnard's (1867-1947) La Porte fenêtre,also known as Matinée au Cannet. In its wonderful vibrancy of colour and vision, it is one of the artist's most compelling interiors and represents a highpoint of his career. The painting depicts the artist's wife, Marthe, eating her breakfast in the small sitting room on the upper floor of 'Le Bosquet', the house where she lived with Bonnard on the Côte d'Azur. Bonnard himself is reflected in the mirror behind her, seated opposite her in a wicker chair. The work was painted in 1932 and has come to the market from a Private European Collection. It was expected to fetch £2,000,000-3,000,000. Price realized: £4,261,600

Sotheby's Impressionist & Modern Art Day SaleNew York | 05 Nov 2014 



PIERRE BONNARD 1867 - 1947 
MARTHE BONNARD SUR UN DIVAN 
ESTIMATE 300,000-400,000 USD 

 Marthe Bonnard sur un divan is a remarkably intimate painting of Marthe de Méligny, Bonnard’s muse and model from the mid-1890s until the end of her life. Bonnard first met Marthe in 1893 when she was working as a shop girl in Paris, and she soon became his life-long companion, although they did not marry until 1925 after the death of Bonnard’s young mistress Renée Monchaty. According to Charles Terrasse, the artist’s nephew, “It is [Marthe] who appears in his pictures, early and later, more than anyone else: a woman of beautiful bodily proportions and peculiar gesture, fleeting and free, of which the great observer’s eye would always catch a gesture, a movement, or an undulation in the light” (Charles Terrasse,  Bonnard and his Environment  (exhibition catalogue), Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1964, p. 16). 

Marthe appears repeatedly throughout Bonnard’s oeuvre and is almost always presented within, and as an integral component of, her domestic setting. Marthe’s dark shirt and shoes in this painting echo the divan and wallpaper. At once remote and intimate,  Marthe Bonnard sur un divan  exemplifies a central Nabis theme: that of the woman depicted in a domestic, interior setting, with the viewer occupying the role of voyeur, a role we are reminded of by Marthe’s vulnerable supine position. We find Marthe lost in a private moment, resting quietly and unaware of being watched. The voyeurism of the present work anticipates the artist’s later exploration of the nude in the bathroom, an interest in the unself-conscious woman in her own domestic space that he shared with Degas and Renoir. Bonnard afforded this seemingly unremarkable activity his utmost attention, clearly besotted with this woman and interested in her every move. Sarah Whitfield remarks on the intensely personal nature of his paintings: “Yet, from the start, this modest and most discreet of men, this least public of artists made his daily life the subject of his art, observing steadily and calmly everything that was closest to him: his family, his surroundings, his companion, his animals... The moments he chooses to paint are the soothing lulls that punctuate a domestic routine” (quoted in Bonnard (exhibition catalogue), Museum of Modern Art, New York & Tate Gallery, London, 1998, pp. 9-10).   

Sotheby's 2014




LOT SOLD. 2,045,000 USD




LOT SOLD. 365,000 USD  



LOT SOLD. 221,000 USD

LOT SOLD.  266,500 GBP



Estimate 3,000,0005,000,000 USD

Christie's 2007





Pr.£276,000($546,756)




Estimation 600,000800,000 USD
 
 
 
 
 

Sotheby's 2013





Estimate 400,000600,000 USD


Christie's 2008




 





 


 





Christie's 2009









Christie's 2010




Christie's 2011










Pierre Bonnard (1867-1947)
Les pins, bord de mer
Pr.£337,250($547,020)


 
 
 
 
 

 


 
 

Pierre Bonnard (1867-1947)
Femme nue assise
Pr.£103,250($167,472)
 

Christie's 2012








Christie's 2013




 Pierre Bonnard (1867-1947)


 

Camille Pissarro at Auction Part II

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Christie's 2014


CAMILLE PISSARRO (1830-1903)

FEMME POUSSANT UNE BROUETTE, ERAGNY 

Price Realized ($2,075,107)

Christie's 2012


Christie's 2011



 Juin, temps pluvieux, Eragny



 
Christie's 2010



CAMILLE PISSARRO (1830-1903)

ENFANTS ATTABLÉS DANS LE JARDIN À ERAGNY

Price Realized $3,442,500 

 

Christie's 2010




 

Christie's 2008














PR.£1,028,500($2,024,088)

 


Christie's 2007







 




 


More Christie's




Pommiers à Éragny
PRICE REALIZED
£2,953,250



Hameau aux environs de Pontoise
PRICE REALIZED
$4,394,500



Pommiers et faneuses, Eragny
PRICE REALIZED
$4,226,500



Le grand noyer, matin, Eragny
PRICE REALIZED
$4,073,000



La cueillette des pommes
PRICE REALIZED
$3,330,500



Vue sur la nouvelle prison de Pontoise, printemps
PRICE REALIZED
$2,953,000



Le lavoir de Bazincourt
PRICE REALIZED
$2,517,000



La Place du Havre et la gare Saint-Lazare
PRICE REALIZED
£1,273,250



Swann 2008





  • CAMILLE PISSARRO (French, 1831-1903) 
    Route de campagne.
    Estimate $5,000 - $8,000
    Price Realized (with Buyer's Premium) $7,800


Bonhams




CAMILLE PISSARRO
(French, 1830-1903)
Le grand noyer a l'Hermitage
Sold for £314,500 (US$ 493,271

Egon Schiele

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 SOTHEBY’S 2003

A MAJOR landscape by the great Austrian Expressionist painter Egon Schiele (1890-1918) will be offered for sale at Sotheby’s in London in June. It has recently been restituted to the heirs of the original Viennese collectors from whom it was looted by the Nazis in 1938. 



Painted in 1916, Krumauer Landschaft (Stadt und Fluss), is a striking and vibrant depiction of the small town of Krumau, on the banks of the Moldau river in Bohemia. It is estimated to fetch £5-7 million in the Impressionist and Modern Art Evening sale .(SELLS FOR £ 12.6 MILLION!)

 The painting was originally part of the collection of Wilhelm (Willy) and Daisy Hellmann of Vienna. Willy was a textile magnate and his wife, Daisy, was a member of one of the most important families of art patrons in Vienna in the first quarter of the 20th century. The Hellmanns bought Landscape at Krumaudirectly from Schiele, who was a personal friend, soon after it was painted. The work hung in the Hellmann’s apartment until October 1938 when it was seized by the Nazis and put up for sale in Vienna in 1942. It was bought by Wolfgang Gurlitt who sold it to the Neue Galerie in Linz in January 1953, where it has been on public display until its restitution earlier this year.

The painting’s history came to light following research by Lucian Simmons, Head of Sotheby’s Restitution department and Andrea Jungmann, Head of Sotheby’s Austria. Their efforts were coordinated with those of the Jewish Community in Vienna, who were instrumental in achieving the painting’s return to its rightful owners.

Schiele had close links with the town of Krumau. It was his mother’s birthplace and a refuge for the artist at various times in his troubled life. Schiele brings a distinctive, vertiginous style to this dynamic vision of his maternal home town. Against a background of verdant green hills, the houses are painted from an unnaturally high vantage point as if stacked up one upon the other with their bright orange-red and brown roofs, while the river snakes through the composition with the sinuous curve of a woman’s body.

Tragically in 1918 at the age of just 28, Schiele fell victim to the Spanish flu epidemic that spread throughout Europe.

Krumauer Landschaft, executed in 1916, epitomises his unique contribution to the development of modern art in the first decades of the 20th century and is one of the greatest townscapes from the last years of his career. 

Sotheby's 2014

 


LOT SOLD. 1,325,000 USD

Sotheby's 2013




LOT SOLD. 7,881,250 GBP



 Sotheby's 2007





Christie's 2007




 



Christie's 2008











 Egon Schiele (1890-1918)












 




























                       




PR.£180,500($355,224)


Christie's 2009





Christie's 2010




Pr.£1,385,250($2,055,711)


Christie's 2011






Christie's 2012








Christie's  2013




 





Pr.£481,250($752,675)

Christie's 2014





John Frederick Kensett at Auction and at the National Gallery

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Biography

John Frederick Kensett was born on March 22, 1816, in Cheshire, Connecticut, the son of Thomas Kensett, an English engraver who had immigrated to America, and Elizabeth Daggett, a New Englander. By 1828, Kensett had begun studying engraving and drawing in his father's firm in New Haven and in 1829 he worked briefly for the engraver Peter Maverick in New York.

 Earning his living as an engraver during the 1830s, Kensett also began to experiment with landscape painting, encouraged by his friend John Casilear (1811-1893).

 In 1838 he exhibited a work entitled Landscape at the National Academy of Design in New York and by 1840 he had decided to become a full-time painter. In that year he sailed for Europe with fellow artists Casilear, Asher B. Durand (1796-1886), and Thomas P. Rossiter (1818-1871).

After an extended stay in Europe, with visits to London, Paris, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy, Kensett returned to New York in 1847. He rapidly established a name as a landscape painter and was elected an Associate of the National Academy in 1848. In 1849 he was named a full member of the Academy and was also elected to membership in the prestigious Century Club, which brought him into contact with numerous leading artistic and literary figures of the day.

Kensett's early works were generally richly painted and owed much to the inspiration of Thomas Cole (1801-1848) and English landscape painters such as John Constable (1776-1837). Works from the early 1850s combined vigorous and expressive brushwork with carefully observed details of rocks, vegetation, and atmosphere in a strikingly effective way, and were well-received.

 By the middle and later 1850s his style had become more precise and meticulous, reflecting the influence of Durand, and he began to favor more tranquil and simplified compositions. Kensett was at the height of his powers in the 1860s and he created some of the most accomplished American landscapes of the nineteenth century.

Although he occasionally painted large works, Kensett generally preferred to work on small to medium sized canvases. Unlike such contemporaries as Frederic Church (1826-1900) or Albert Bierstadt (1830-1902), who travelled to exotic and far-off locales in search of inspiration, Kensett returned again and again to favorite spots that were easily accessible to New York.

Never tiring of the pictorial possibilities of these places, Kensett produced a substantial body of works that seem superficially similar, but in fact have subtle, but significant variations in composition, lighting, and atmosphere. He became so well known for painting certain places, including Bash-Bish Falls, Lake George, and the coastal areas of Newport, Rhode Island, and Beverly, Massachusetts, that many of his contemporaries invariably associated them with his name.

Kensett maintained a high profile in the artistic and cultural circles of New York and was respected and well liked by his fellow artists. In 1859 he was appointed a member of the National Art Commission, which was charged with overseeing the decoration of the Capitol in Washington. He was one of the founders of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1870 and also served as a member of its board of trustees. In these same years he began to experiment with simpler and more austere, even reductive, compositions. Many of his works from 1870-1872 were unfinished, but examples such as Eaton's Neck, Long Island (1872, Metropolitan Museum of Art) are remarkable for their powerful arrangements of a few boldly simplified shapes representing earth, sea, and sky.

On December 14, 1872, Kensett died in New York City, of pneumonia and heart disease contracted while trying to retrieve the body of a friend's wife from the waters off Contentment Island, Connecticut. His passing at the age of fifty-six was considered virtually a national tragedy, and when the contents of his studio were auctioned in 1873 they brought more than $136,000, an astonishing sum for the period. For many of his contemporaries Kensett had represented a kind of artistic epitome in landscape painting.




Sotheby's 2014




LOT SOLD. 81,250 USD



Sotheby's 2011





LOT SOLD. 22,500 USD


Sotheby's 2010









LOT SOLD. 98,500 USD

Christie's 2013





                 




 






 
















 

National Gallery (Washington DC)



Paul Signac at Auction

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 Sotheby’s Evening Sale of Impressionist and Modern Art 8th February 2011


Paul Signac (1863-1935), Venise. La Salute Vert, 1908. Est: £1.8-2.5 million. Photo: Sotheby's
Lot. Vendu 2,337,250 GBP
Paul Signac’s oil on canvas Venise. La Salute Vert, 1908 (est: £1.8-2.5 million) was inspired by the artist’s visit to Venice following a fascination with the city partly influenced by John Ruskin’s popular The Stones of Venice. Painted in the same year as Monet’s series of paintings of Venice, mosaic-like brushwork is here contrasted with dabs of bright green, blue, pink and yellow pigment, giving the scene the shimmering effect.



Also offered was Signac’s oil on canvas Barfleur, 1931 (est: £900,000-£1.2 million), depicting the port of Barfleur in Normandy. So delighted by this region, Signac bought a little fisherman’s house with a view of the harbour in 1931 - a view of which he never tired of painting.

Sotheby's 2010



 

LOT SOLD. 23,750 GBP

Sotheby's 2011




LOT SOLD. 2,617,250 GBP


Sotheby's 2012



  

LOT SOLD. 3,625,250 GBP


Sotheby's 2013




LOT SOLD. 245,000 USD




LOT SOLD. 40,625 USD





Lote. Vendido 3,413,000 USD





LOT SOLD. 34,375 USD




LOT SOLD. 31,250 USD






LOT SOLD. 413,000 USD




Sotheby's 2014





LOT SOLD. 3,525,000 USD




LOT SOLD. 62,500 USD




LOT SOLD. 8,125 GBP

Sotheby's 2015




LOT SOLD. 37,500 GBP




LOT SOLD. 27,500 GBP




LOT SOLD. 13,750 GBP



Christie's 2014






Pr.£1,833,250($2,914,868)


 Christie's 2013






Christie's 2012



 Christie's 2008









 Christie's 2007








 Christie's 2013




                       




 Christie's 2012








 Christie's 2011



Paul Signac (1863-1935)

 Christie's 2010







Pr.$2,098,500





William Michael Harnett

$
0
0

Biography

Born in Clonakilty, Ireland, in 1848, William Michael Harnett was brought to Philadelphia as an infant by his immigrant parents, a shoemaker and a seamstress. After several years of Catholic schooling, he began to contribute to his family's support by selling newspapers and working as an errand boy. During his teenage years, Harnett trained as an engraver; by 1866 he was enrolled in the Antique class of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. He continued his lengthy artistic education in New York, where he moved in 1869. While working in a silver engraving shop he attended classes at the Cooper Union and, for four years, at the National Academy of Design. He also sought instruction from the portraitist Thomas Jensen, but his time with that painter appears to have been brief.

By 1875 Harnett had begun to execute oil paintings. That year he exhibited several fruit still lifes at the National Academy and the Brooklyn Art Association. A year later he was back in Philadelphia, exhibiting and, once again, studying at the Pennsylvania Academy. Harnett's style of precise still-life painting changed very little throughout his career. Generally, he composed small groups of darkly toned objects (often materials associated with writing, reading, banking, drinking, or smoking) on shallow tabletops, paying particular attention to the intense description of surface texture. Later, his arrangements would grow more elaborate, with the introduction of time-worn objects from his collection of artistic bric-a-brac. Harnett's effects of trompe l'oeil verisimilitude were particularly striking when he adopted an alternate compositional format of a shallow, vertical plane--usually a wooden door--from which letters, horseshoes, books, musical instruments, or wild game were suspended.

A sale of his paintings in 1880 provided the artist with funds to go abroad. After a brief stay in London and six months of employment for a private patron in Frankfort, Harnett settled in Munich, where he remained for about three years. During this period, he frequently sent canvases back to the United States for exhibition and sale. He was also active in the Munich Kunstverein, although his application to attend the Munich Royal Academy was rejected. The European sojourn ended with a short stay in Paris before his return to New York in 1886.

Harnett's late years were marked by greatly expanded commercial success, but also by increasingly debilitating bouts of illness. His larger works now brought prices of several thousand dollars, and his uncanny naturalism found wide appeal among newspaper writers and general viewers. Although relegated to the margins of the professional artistic community (he was never elected to the National Academy), his influence was great among late nineteenth-century still-life painters. Yet rheumatism and kidney disease often kept him from his easel for periods of several months. Harnett sought relief from his condition--in Hot Springs, Arkansas in late 1887 and in Wiesbaden, Germany in 1889--and was forced to check into New York City hospitals on at least four occasions. He died in New York Hospital in 1892.


Sotheby's 2013





LOT SOLD. 68,750 USD

Sotheby's 2011




LOT SOLD. 28,125 USD



LOT SOLD. 313,000 USD

Christie's 2012








Christie's 2007





Christie's 1998





National Gallery of Art (Washington DC)


J.M.W. Turner: Painting Set Free

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February 24, 2015 – May 24, 2015 At the J. Paul Getty Museum, Getty Center

The exhibition premiered at the Tate Britain in September 2014, and, after its run at the Getty, will travel to the de Young Museum, San Francisco from June 20, 2015, to September 20, 2015.
 


One of the most influential painters of nature who ever lived, Joseph Mallord William Turner (English, 1775–1851) was especially creative and inventive in the latter years of his life, producing many of his most famous and important paintings after the age of 60. On view at the J. Paul Getty Museum February 24, 2015, through May 24, 2015, J.M.W.Turner: Painting Set Free brings together more than 60 key oil paintings and watercolors from this culminating period of his career, and is the West Coast’s first major exhibition of Turner’s work.

“J.M.W. Turner is the towering figure of British 19th century art, a ground-breaking innovator in his own day whose relevance and status as a seeming harbinger of 20th century ‘modernism’ has made him an inspiration to generations of later artists up to the present day. A successful and well-known public figure in his own day, Turner produced some of his most innovative and challenging work during the last 16 years of his life,” explains Timothy Potts, director of the J. Paul Getty Museum. “He was frequently mocked and misunderstood for his choice of unusual subject matters, his experimentation with different canvas formats, and his pioneering free and spontaneous techniques in both oil and watercolor. While Turner could not knowingly have anticipated future artistic trends, he is seen today by many as a prophet of modernism because of his rough, gestural brushwork and quasi-abstract subject matter. His work captured the natural landscape’s atmosphere and color like no other artist before him, and conveyed the awe-inspiring power of the elements as never before. This exhibition celebrates Turner as the most innovative and experimental artist of his time, and I have no doubt that it will be inspiring to a new generation of artists working in California today.”

“The exhibition shows an artist at the top of his game, totally at ease with his media, and still keen to push boundaries and challenge assumptions. We see how Turner was modern in his own time, but the results are astonishing even for us today,” said Julian Brooks, one of the exhibition curators.

The Sea

In his later years, Turner’s continuing fascination with the sea reached a zenith. Although he respected existing conventions of marine painting, particularly its 17th-century Dutch roots, he consistently moved beyond them, turning the water into a theater for drama and effect. At the Royal Academy exhibitions, he confounded viewers with his bold portrayals of modern maritime action—whales and their hunters battling for survival—while striving to capture the mysterious depths and forces of the elements. Never having witnessed a whale hunt himself, he included a reference to “Beale’s Voyage” in the catalogues, acknowledging that his source of inspiration was Thomas Beale’s Natural History of the Sperm Whale (1839). (Herman Melville consulted the same book when writing Moby-Dick, published in 1851.)

The London press at the time greeted Turner’s whaling pictures, such as 







Hurrah! for the Whaler Erebus! Another Fish!, 1846, 

with scathing attacks, lambasting their yellow palette and lack of finish. The Almanack of the Month printed a cartoon of a Turner painting with a large mop and a bucket labeled “yellow,” and opined that his pictures resembled a lobster salad.


In addition to the sea, Turner’s insatiable appetite for history, different cultures, and sublime natural scenery drew him time and again to Continental Europe, where he observed not only spectacular sites such as ancient ruins, medieval castles, jagged mountain peaks, and meandering rivers, but also local customs and dress. On such travels he made numerous watercolor sketches, which effectively captured fleeting effects of nature on paper. These works display a complex layering of color animated through the pulsing energy of turbulent handling. They demonstrate both Turner’s commitment to observed natural effects and his unwavering obsession with the vagaries and delights of watercolor, a medium he had indisputably made his own. Some of the finished watercolors he made for sale after his trips, such as  





The Blue Rigi, Sunrise, 1842, represent pinnacles in the use of watercolor technique.

Turner was especially captivated by the particular combination of light and color he found in Venice, and revisited the city several times. He traveled lightly, usually alone, making few concessions to his age or failing strength, and drew constantly in his sketchbooks. Turner’s many images of Venice were among his most potent late works, influencing later artists such as James Abbott McNeill Whistler (American, 1834-1903) and Claude Monet (French, 1840-1926).

For Turner, watercolor was the perfect medium to capture Venice’s aqueous and luminous effects. While based on on-the-spot sketches done there in 1840, Turner’s later paintings of Venice drew out the city’s essence and spirit rather than its exact topography. His Venice was often touched with a melancholy that echoed the romantic fatalism popularized by writers such as Lord Byron, offering a warning from history to Britain’s rise as a commercial empire.

Poetry

Turner was deeply interested in poetry and often paired his paintings with lines of text in order to elucidate their themes. In some cases he authored the poems himself but often he quoted celebrated 18th- and 19th-century British poets such as Thomas Gray and, most especially, Lord Bryon. Throughout the Getty exhibition, many of the lines of poetry or prose that he chose or wrote are reunited with his pictures on the gallery walls. For example, the lines “The moon is up, and yet it is not night/ The sun as yet disputes the day with her” from Byron’s Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (1812–18) were chosen, and slightly altered by Turner to accompany two paintings:  




Modern Rome- Campo Vaccino, exhibited 1839,




and Approach to Venice,  exhibited 1844,

which both feature the setting sun and a rising moon but also evoke the rise and fall of empires.

Contemporary Events

Much of Tuner’s later work reflects on contemporary events including the modern state of Italy, the legacy of the Napoleonic Wars, and the spectacular fires that ravaged the Palace of Westminster and the Tower of London in 1834 and 1841, respectively. In addition, Turner was the first major European artist to engage with innovations such as steam power, as seen in




Snow Storm: Steam-Boat off a Harbour's Mouth, 1842,

which shows this much-vaunted new technology at the mercy of the awesome power of the elements.

Technique

Perhaps nothing demonstrates Turner’s virtuosity as a painter better than the stories of his performances on “Varnishing Days.” The Royal Academy and the British Institution would set aside a short period of time for artists to put final touches on their work before an exhibition opened to the public. Turner reveled in the competitive jostling and repartee that occurred on these occasions. In his later years, he would frequently submit canvases with only the roughest indications of color and form, speedily bringing them to completion on-site. Eyewitnesses record that Turner painted most of  





The Hero of a Hundred Fights, 1800–10, reworked and exhibited 1847,




and Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons, 16th October 1834, 1834-1835, on their respective varnishing days.

Pairs and Shapes

In his later years, Turner was as creative in his approach to media, materials, and techniques as he was in his choice of subject matter. He created works that offer some of his most dazzling displays of color, audacious handling, and complex iconographies. From 1840 to 1846, the artist employed a smaller canvas size for a series of paintings, which were often conceived as pairs expressing opposites, such as two that were exhibited in 1842:  




Peace – Burial at Sea and War.




The Exile and the Rock Limpet.

These were principally square but could also be round or octagonal. Exploring states of consciousness, optics, and the emotive power of color, they shocked and mystified his audience, who thought them the products of senility or madness. Painted near the end of his life, these inventive works are a coda to Turner’s career, representing a synthesis of his innovations in technique, composition and theme.

Turner died in 1851 at age 76, leaving the majority of his work to the English nation along with an intended bequest to support impoverished artists. In the years since, while popular and scholarly ideas about his work have changed, he inarguably emerges as one of the most beloved figures and popular painters in the history of the United Kingdom.

This exhibition was organized by Tate Britain in association with the J. Paul Getty Museum and the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. It is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. The Getty Museum curators of the exhibition are Julian Brooks, curator of drawings, and Peter Björn Kerber, assistant curator of paintings.




The exhibition is accompanied by the publicationJ.M.W. Turner: Painting Set Free. Edited by David Blayney Brown, Amy Concannon, and Sam Smiles, this 250-page volume is richly illustrated.

Zeitgeist: Art in the Germanic World

$
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February 10 – May 17, 2015
At the J. Paul Getty Museum, Getty Center


 
Frantiek Kupka (Czech, 1871 - 1957). Girl Shading Her Eyes, about 1908. Pastel. 22 11/16 x 18 1/4 in. 2010.93. © 2014 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, Gift of Richard A. Simms in Memory of James N. Wood (1941-2010), President and Chief Executive Officer of the J. Paul Getty Trust 2007-2010

Between 1800 and 1900, the Germanic world underwent a number of profound intellectual, social, economic and political changes. The writings of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, the Industrial Revolution, the formal unification of Germany, and the rise of psychoanalysis all shaped modern life and its representations in art. Art reflected the spirit of the age (Zeitgeist in German), and this influential notion held sway throughout the 19th century. Bringing together objects from the J. Paul Getty Museum, Getty Research Institute, and distinguished private collections, Zeitgeist: Art in the Germanic World, 1800-1900, on view February 10-May 17, 2015 at the Getty Center, features German, Austrian and Czech drawings, paintings, and prints that spectacularly reflect this transformative age.

“The romantic movement of nineteenth-century art was defined above all by German artists, composers and writers, and it is they who gave it the most explicitly spiritual expression, as a way of seeing, representing and understanding nature as the primal and defining force of life,” says Timothy Potts, director of the J. Paul Getty Museum. “It is still, however, less well known than its rival movements in nineteenth-century art—Neoclassicism and, later, French Impressionism. German Romantic drawings, paintings, and prints are rare in this country and we are fortunate to have extraordinary riches in Los Angeles, not only at the J. Paul Getty Museum and Getty Research Institute, but also in local private collections. This exhibition offers our visitors a rare insight into this fascinating and increasingly influential period in the history of art through works that are by turns dark and brooding, exhilarating and affirming.”

The transcendent domination of nature over human life was perhaps the most important defining theme of German Romantic art in the early 19th century. This concept received its greatest expression in the work of Caspar David Friedrich (German, 1774-1840) and Philipp Otto Runge (German, 1777-1810), both of whom are prominently featured in the exhibition. Friedrich, a loner, found his inspiration in vast, empty landscapes that he used as vehicles for ruminating on death, the mystery of human life, and the human spirit. His haunting A Walk at Dusk (about 1830-35) features a cloaked man walking in moonlight, contemplating a megalithic tomb. The cold light of the waxing moon, moody indigo sky, and lifeless trees offer a painted reverie about death and the passage of time.

Runge‘s art also centered upon the world of nature and its relation to the cycle of human life through its perpetual process of emergence and decay. His early death at the age of 33 makes his spare meditations on life and death all the more affecting. His four prints from the Times of Day series constitute a virtual manifesto of his art, and he evokes the organic process of conception, growth, decay, and death through the blooming and fading of flowers.
 
Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld (German, 1794 – 1872). Siegfried Battles with the Gatekeeper, 1865, Black ink and graphite. Image: 11 9/16 x 8 1/16 in. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
In the 1800s, art academies assumed prominence in Germany and Austria-Hungary for the training of young artists. The strict academic regimen hindered artists from expressing their individual temperaments, and a number of breakaway movements developed. The Nazarenes were one such movement centered in Rome, where artists shared a communal life in search of artistic renewal and spiritual purity. They created many book illustrations as seen in Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld’s Siegfried Battles with the Gatekeeper (1865). Used as preparation for the printed illustration for the epic poem The Song of the Nibelungs, the drawing features Siegfried, a legendary, dragon-slaying hero, fighting his way into a fortress of the evil dwarf Alberich. In the finished illustration the verses of the poem were added to the empty box.

Many German artists were drawn to Rome or the Eternal City and its environs because of its picturesque scenery and remnants of classical antiquity. One section of the exhibition explores this theme with drawings that range from the classically pastoral imagery of Joseph Anton Koch to the proto-Modernist sparseness of Ernst Fries.

Gustav Klimt (Austrian, 1862 - 1918). Portrait of a Young Woman Reclining, 1897 - 1898, Black chalk. 45.5 x 31.5 cm (17 15/16 x 12 3/8 in.) The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
The end of the 19th century, however, saw the rise of Vienna as one of Europe’s cultural centers. Music and art flourished in an edgy atmosphere that celebrated taboo themes of sex and the unfettered subconscious. The Vienna Secession, formed in 1897 by nineteen artists and led by Gustav Klimt, searched for new forms of expression that would be in keeping with modern life. This part of the exhibition includes work by Klimt, Alphonse Mucha, Franz Kupka, and other artists who worked primarily in Austria-Hungary. Klimt’s Portrait of a Young Woman Reclining (1897-98) features a young woman resting on a chaise, her face haloed by a cloud of hair. Its soft-focus handling and dreamlike atmosphere were key elements of the Vienna Secession’s artistic philosophy.

Zeitgeist: Art in the Germanic World, 1800-1900, is on view February 10-May 17, 2015 at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Getty Center. The exhibition is curated by Lee Hendrix, senior curator of drawings at the J. Paul Getty Museum. A full list of related events to be announced.

Caspar David Friedrich (German, 1774 – 1840) A Walk at Dusk, about 1830 - 1835, Oil on canvas. 13 1/8 x 17 3/16 in. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Otto Dix

$
0
0
 
 
 
 
 


Christie's 2015




Est.. £100,000 - £150,000
($151,300 -$226,950)







 


 
 


 

Christie's 2012





Christie's 2011





Pr.£27,500($44,193)









Christie's 2010





                


Christie's 2007



Pr.$2,505,000

Christie's 2006





 

 

Otto Dix (1891-1969)
Fetischisten gewidmet
Pr.£142,400($262,443)


More  Christie's 2011

 
 
 
 

 
 

Moïse Kisling at Auction

$
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 Sotheby's 2014



LOT SOLD. 173,000 USD



LOT SOLD. 81,250 USD


Lot. Vendu 50,000 GBP


Sotheby's 2013



 
LOT SOLD. 68,750 USD


Christie's 2013






 



 
 


Christie's  1999






 

George Grosz at Auction

$
0
0


Sotheby's 2014




LOT SOLD. 40,625 US

 Christie's 2015


 


Sotheby's 2013
 
 
 
LOT SOLD. 28,125 USD



Christie's 2014














 Christie's 2013

George Grosz (1893-1959)


Pr.$23,750


 

George Grosz (1893-1959)
Street Scene, New York
Pr.£25,000($40,175)



2010







 



 





2009





2004



Pr.$17,925

  More:

Christie's  2012
 

Eugène Boudin at Auction

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At auction:

SOTHEBY'S Impressionist and Modern Art February 4, 2003  



Eugène Boudin's (1824-98) beach scenes have long been understood as vital documents of the Impressionist vision. There are several in the sale including Plage et crinolines which is a landscape of particular beauty and spontaneity. It is estimated at £300,000-400,000. 

Sotheby's 2014




Lot. Vendu 725,000 USD




LOT SOLD. 437,000 USD


Sotheby's 2013




LOT SOLD. 245,000 USD

Sotheby's 2009


 

LOT SOLD. 7,500 GBP

Sotheby's 2007



LOT SOLD. 741,000 USD

Christie's 2013





 


Christie's 2012 




Pr.$188,500




 Christie's 2010






 



 Christie's 2009


 
 Christie's 2008




 
 






  


 
Pr.$92,500

 Christie's 2004





 


 


 Christie's 2000

 




Christie's 1999







 

Christie's 2011

Pr.£67,250($109,080)

Max Beckmann at Auction

$
0
0

Sotheby's 2014




LOT SOLD. 1,025,000 USD

Sotheby's 2013



A canvas painted in New York by German Expressionist painter Max Beckmann (1884-1950) Vor dem Ball (Zwei Frauen mit Katze), or Before the Ball (Two Women with a Cat), from 1949 and offered by a private party, is estimated to bring $8-$12.8 million at Sotheby's Impressionist and modern art evening sale on Feb. 5, 2013.

If the estimated price is achieved, it will put the painting among the top Beckmann canvases sold at auction, according to statistics from Artnet.com. His Self-portrait with Horn (1938) sold in 2001 at Sotheby's for $22.6 million; Self-portrait with Crystal Ball (1936) brought $16.8 million at Sotheby's in 2005; and Still Life with Gramophone and Irises (1924) went for $7.3 million at Christie's in 2007. Those are all oils on canvas, like Vor dem Ball, and slightly smaller than the 1949 work, which measures 56 by 39 inches.


Christie's 2013







Christie's 2012






 


 

 

Christie's 2011




Christie's 2010




 




Christie's 2008










Christie's 2007



More Christie's

Christie's 2012




Pr.$16,250


 
 
 
 

Marie Laurencin at Auction

$
0
0



Sotheby's 2014






LOT SOLD. 50,000 USD




LOT SOLD. 12,500 GBP




Lot. Vendu 46,875 USD


Sotheby's 2013






LOT SOLD. 149,000 USD

Christie's 2014







Christie's 2013











 

 


 





Christie's 2012










Christie's 2011







Christie's 2008









Pr.$62,500




  


Christie's 2004







 


Christie's 2000






 




 

 
 

 
Christie's 1999






 










 
 

 
 

Oskar Kokoschka at Auction and at the National Galleries of Scotland

$
0
0




LOT SOLD. 9,375 GBP
Sotheby's 2014




Estimate50,00070,000 GBP
 
 
 
 
 

Estimate 8,00012,000 GBP
 
 
 
LOT SOLD. 25,000 USD

Sotheby's 2013






Estimate700,000900,000 GBP
 
 Sotheby's 2012


 
 Sotheby's 2011
 
 
 
 
 
 
Christie's 2013
 



Christie's 2011


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