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Edgar Degas at Auction

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Sotheby’s London Impressionist & Modern Evening Sale 3rd February 2015




Edgar Degas, Quatre Danseuses, est. £3 – 5 million / $4.6 – 7.7 million

Executed shortly after the turn of the century, Edgar Degas’ highly expressive Quatre Danseuses depicts one of the artist’s favourite subjects – ballet dancers preparing for a performance. Throughout his career, Degas’ treatment of this subject underwent a radical metamorphosis, and in his later years he developed a highly expressive use of materials. InQuatre Danseuses the artist’s vibrant markings, applied in coat after coat of coloured chalk, achieve an effect that appears to be painted. By the end of his career Degas had become a modern artist whose expressive techniques influenced many more of the greatest colourists that followed. 


Sotheby’s 4 November 2009



One of Edgar Degas’ finest racing pictures, Avant la course, painted circa1882-88 will also be offered (est. $4/6 million). The artist’s exploration of the world of the racetrack and steeplechase developed in tandem with his survey of other aspects of the modern world, notably the world of dance. In his depictions of equestrian subjects, Degas moved from the precise delineation of complex arrangements of figures in space in the first half of his career to a much broader, more atmospheric approach in the latter half, when the present work was executed. Avant la course is composed of flat modernist patches of color in which the artist employed great contrasts of light and dark forms and asserted the dynamism of the composition over any specificity of details. 


Bonhams Impressionist & Modern Art auction on 3 February 2015


 
Edgar Degas' 1885 oil on canvas, Scène de ballet, is to be offered at the Impressionist & Modern Art auction on 3 February 2015 at Bonhams New Bond Street. The work, a wonderful example of Degas' ground-breaking work in the mid-1880s, is estimated at £2,500,000-3,500,000.

Degas' fascination with the dancers of the Paris Opéra was the source of more than 1,000 paintings, pastels, charcoal drawings and prints, which together earned the artist the reputation as the greatest painter of the Paris ballet. He obsessively readdressed the subject, using it to explore a number of revolutionary styles and innovative techniques.

In Scène de ballet, Degas depicts not only the row of on-stage dancers in the background, but also the girls off-stage, stretching and chatting in the foreground. The artist sought to cover all aspects of the ballet, from the initial rehearsals and preparations through to the bright lights and thrilling spectacle of the final performance.

The ballet became for Degas a lens through which he could experiment with light, color and movement, all the while observing and documenting the contemporary social milieu. Performances brought together the social classes, providing a cross section of society, and Degas depicted the drawn, tired faces of the dancers, who usually came from the most impoverished area of the city, alongside the affluent and predatory abonnés (season-ticket holders) who hung around backstage to proposition the girls.

As such, a behind-the-curtain image such as Scène de ballet shares something of the social commentary of Degas' earlier paintings of café culture and brothels which established his fame. But this similarity of subject belies the significant difference between this 1885 painting and those which went before.

The mid-1880s was a crucial few years in Degas' development. Previously, the artist had been working in a tight, precise style founded on exquisite draftsmanship. From around 1885, however, he developed a new style of which Scène de ballet is a prime example – looser, brighter, and more abstracted in form.

Works such as Scène de ballet represent a turning point for Degas. The skirts, faces and bodies of the dancers are conjured from clouds of pigment, while the stage-set background is created using layer upon layer of paint applied directly with the artist's thumbs. We see, too, the beginnings of the bursting vibrancy – ultramarines, turquoises, russets, cardamom reds, roses pinks and flashes of brightest yellows – for which his late bathers and dancers were so celebrated.

Only a year after Degas painted Scène de ballet, he took part in his final Impressionist group show, and began his withdrawal from the public art world. But his experimentation with the possibilities of color and form continued until his death in 1917, culminating in the staggeringly modern late works which 20th-century masters such as Picasso and Matisse found so inspiring.

India Phillips, Director and Head of the Impressionist & Modern Art Department at Bonhams, said: 'Degas is the painter of the ballet. No other artist has captured the movements, costumes and spectacle of the dance in the same way. Scène de ballet is as iconic an image as you could hope for, and we are honored to be offering it for sale.'
 
 
 Bonhams 2014



EDGAR DEGAS
(1834-1917)
Danseuses et contrebasse 
9 x 6 3/4 in (23.2 x 17 cm)
Sold for US$ 485,000

Sotheby’s 2014


Edgar Degas
DEUX DANSEUSES ASSISES
LOT SOLD. 5,205,000 USD



Edgar Degas
DEUX DANSEUSES AU FOYER
LOT SOLD. 506,500 GBP



Edgar Degas
LA CONVERSATION
Estimate 3,500,0005,000,000USD
Edgar Degas
DEUX ÉTUDES POUR DANSEUSES
LOT SOLD. 1,426,500 GBP

Edgar Degas
CHEVAL GALOPANT
LOT SOLD. 100,000 USD 

Edgar Degas
AU SALON (CES DAMES)
LOT SOLD. 20,000 GBP
Edgar Degas
DEUX ÉTUDES DE CAVALIER
LOT SOLD. 57,500 GBP  

Edgar Degas
JOCKEY BLESSÉ
LOT SOLD. 45,000 GBP

Sotheby’s 2013



Edgar Degas
DANSEUSE RAJUSTANT SON CHAUSSON
LOT SOLD. 4,521,250 GBP



Edgar Degas
APRÈS LE BAIN (FEMME S'ESSUYANT)
LOT SOLD. 7,769,250 GBP 

Edgar Degas
FEMMES AU BAIN
Estimate 350,000450,000 GBP
Edgar Degas
FEMME SE PEIGNANT
LOT SOLD. 1,085,000 USD  


Sotheby’s 2012

Edgar Degas
AUTOPORTRAIT
Estimate
1,200,0001,800,000
Sotheby’s 2010
Edgar Degas
FEMME S'ESSUYANT APRÈS LE BAIN
LOT SOLD. 992,500 USD 
 Sotheby’s 2008

Edgar Degas
FEMME SE COIFFANT
Estimate 3,000,0004,000,000 USD

Christie's



Danseuses à la barre
PRICE REALIZED
£13,481,250



Danseuses
PRICE REALIZED
$10,722,500



Danseuses jupes jaunes (Deux danseuses en jaune)
PRICE REALIZED
£5,417,250



Trois danseuses (Jupes jaunes, corsages bleus)
PRICE REALIZED
£3,961,250




Après le bain, femme s'essuyant
PRICE REALIZED
$5,906,500



Trois danseuses
PRICE REALIZED
$4,297,000




Danseuse rajustant ses épaulettes
PRICE REALIZED
£2,281,250





Femme à sa toilette
PRICE REALIZED
£1,700,000



Femme s'épongeant le dos
PRICE REALIZED
$3,218,500

Christie's2014





Christie's2012






Christie's2009



 


 

 


Christie's2008







 



Christie's2007



 



 

Edouard Manet at Auction

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Christie’s Evening Sale of Impressionist and Modern Art on Wednesday, 5 November  2014



EDOUARD MANET’S, LE PRINTEMPS, 1881 
 Edouard Manet’s masterpiece portrait, Le Printemps (estimate: $25-35 million). 

Encapsulating all the major themes of the early modern period, from nature and femininity to society and fashion, Springtime is one of Manet’s best known and most widely reproduced works, and perfectly exemplifies the revolutionary style that Manet embraced.
  • The portrait depicts the actress Jeanne Demarsy, cast as an allegory of spring. She also appears in the background of Manet’s iconic scene Un bar aux Folies-Bergere. Both paintings were exhibited at the Paris Salon of 1882, and together they sealed Manet’s fame as a titan of modern-era painting.
  • This masterwork comes completely fresh to the market, having remained in the same collection for over a century and been on loan for the last two decades at the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C.    Of the 30 paintings that Manet exhibited at the Salon over the course of his lifetime, this is the last remaining in private hands.
  •  
  • Brooke Lampley, Head of Impressionist and Modern Art comments, “On the heels of the fantastic traveling exhibition Impressionism, Fashion and Modernity, of which works by Manet were a keystone, we are delighted to have been entrusted with the sale of Le Printemps. This painting is by the first artist of the modern era, encapsulating all major themes of the early modern period, from nature and femininity to societyand fashion.One of his best known and most widely reproduced works, Le Printemps exemplifies the revolutionary style that Manet embraced.”

    From the mid-1860s, Manet had established his reputation as the leading master of portraiture among the practitioners of “New Painting,” radically transforming its scope to embrace a dialogue between the traditional canon of art history and contemporary Belle Époque Paris. Actress Jeanne Demarsy is cast as an allegory of spring, a theme artists embraced since antiquity, yet executed in the artist’s ground-breaking painterly style and in a vanguard setting.

    With an eye to Goya and early Renaissance portraits of young noblewomen, Manet posed Jeanne in profile. He evoked the arrival of spring in his treatment of Jeanne’s specially designed flowered dress, her lacy parasol, her bonnet regaled with blossoms, and the profuse verdant foliage of rhododendrons he painted behind her. Of the four seasons, Manet completed only Le Printemps and L’Automne,)Musée des Beaux-Arts of Nancy).

    Adrien Meyer, International Director, comments, "In this breathtaking
    Painting Manet depicts a coquettish but self-assured Jeanne Demarsy as Spring. His distinguished use of black anchors the painting and emphasizes Jeanne's fragility. Manet projects in this masterpiece an idea of the modern woman, feminine and free, attracting yet deflecting the gaze of the viewer. Le Printemps is one of the last museum-quality works by Manet to come to auction. When again will the market offer a picture that truly made Impressionist history?”

    Le Printemps was exhibited at the Paris Salon of 1882, along with Un bar aux Folies-Bergère–the supreme masterpiece of Manet’s oeuvre. Previously, the official Salon system in France had thwarted Manet’s hopes and plans for public success, recognition, and acceptance throughout his career. The submission of these two paintings, however, only a year before the artist’s premature death, would prove triumphant and potentially redefine Manet’s legacy. The works were enthusiastically received and led to a wide-spread call for reproduced images of both.

    Manet’s friend, the journalist Antonin Proust ,who had suggested the theme of the four seasons to him, was the painting’s first owner in 1883. By 1902, the painting had entered the holdings of the important Impressionist collector J. B. Faure, the famed operatic baritone, who was an avid collector and great patron of Manet. The dealer Durand-Ruel acquired the painting from Faure in 1907 and shipped it to his New York gallery, from which it was purchased in 1909, having remained ever since in private hands. 


    Sotheby’s Evening Sale of Impressionist & Modern Art in London on 23 June 2014 




     
    LOT SOLD. 3,330,500 GBP
    Painted in 1879, Jeune femme dans les fleurs (est. £3-4 million/ $5-7million) represents the height of Édouard Manet’s interest in the Impressionist movement. During the 1870s and early 1880s Manet would set aside his more formal compositions and embrace his contemporaries’ passion for painting en plein air. The resulting images, including the present work, are masterpieces of deft, descriptive brushwork, executed in verdant colours which delightfully set off the tranquil subject matter. Jeune femme dans les fleurs was included in an auction of property from Manet’s estate that was held at the Hôtel Drouot, Paris, in 1884. The work last appeared at auction in 1998, when Mr. Wilson acquired it from Sotheby’s auction of the Reader’s Digest Collection – one of the first and most significant corporate collections of art in America.
    Sotheby’s Evening sale of Impressionist and Modern Art, 8th February 2011

    Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919), La Lecture, deux femmes aux corsages rouge et rose. Est: £2-3million. Photo: Sotheby's
    Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s La Lecture, deux femmes aux corsages rouge et rose (est: £2-3million) is undoubtedly among the most successful of Renoir’s late large-scale works. It comes to the market with an exceptional history: in 1954, the painting was sold at the Galerie Charpentier in Paris to a private English collector in whose family possession it has remained until now. Its first museum showing since 1938 was in the Philadelphia Museum of Art's landmark exhibition Renoir in the 20th Century held in 2010.

    A tender and harmonious portrait, La Lecture is one of the most beautiful, touching and serene of Renoir's late works. Intimate and filled with subtle sensuality, the painting lyrically demonstrates Renoir's masterly ability to portray his figures in an entirely natural way. In later years, success allowed him to paint the sitters who most interested and touched him, especially his family and those with whom he chose to be in contact. Here he magically catches an intimate moment in which two beautiful young women, oblivious to all around them, even the artist, are entranced by the words they are reading.
    Sotheby's 2014
     
    LOT SOLD. 3,525,000 USD


    LOT SOLD. 1,426,500 GBP
    Sotheby's 2013


     
    LOT SOLD. 1,265,000 

     
    Lot. Vendu 1,609,250 GBP 

    Édouard Manet’s beautifully rendered pastel on canvas Jeune fille en déshabille, 1882 (est: £1-1.5 million) was previously owned by one of the first American collectors of Impressionist art, Mrs Thomas A. Scott, the wife of the president of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Bought on the advice of the Impressionist artist Mary Cassatt, the pastel depicts a model thought to bear resemblance to the actress Ellen Andrée, who is also believed to be the model for another Manet pastel in the collection of the Louvre and who famously sat for Degas’ L’Absinthe. As in some of Degas’s most sensitive pastel portraits, the model’s delicate beauty here is exquisitely captured. This evocative pastel featured in the first posthumous retrospective of Manet’s work in Paris in 1884.
    Sotheby's 2010



     
    LOT SOLD. 7,657,250 




    Christie's 2011



PAUL CÉZANNE at AUCTION

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CHRISTIE’S London, 4 February 2015


PAUL CÉZANNE
Vue sur L’Estaque et Le Château d’If
Christie’s announced the sale of a masterpiece by Paul Cézanne, Vue sur L’Estaque et Le Château d’If, which comes to the market for the first time since it was acquired in 1936 by Samuel Courtauld, the founder of the illustrious Courtauld Gallery and Institute of Art in London (estimate: £8-12 million). The painting remained in Courtauld’s private collection throughout his lifetime and following his generous bequest to the Courtauld Gallery. One of the leading highlights of the Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale on 4 February 2015, this magisterial work was painted circa 1883-1885, during one of the last visits that Cézanne ever made to L’Estaque, a fishing port and small seaside resort in his native Provence, where he sought inspiration repeatedly from the mid-1860s. This is a rare example on a vertical canvas of Cézanne’s treatment of this iconic motif; the format lends the composition stately dignity and remarkable concentration of colour and form.
The splendid panorama – captured in Vue sur L’Estaque et Le Château d’If - from the hilltop above the town, looking over the rooftops toward the bay of Marseille and the distant islands of Frioul, provided the basis for some of the most innovative landscapes of Cézanne’s career, in which he fully realised his goal to “make of Impressionism something solid and enduring like the art in museums.” 
The stable and harmonious distribution of forms within the composition, with broad horizontal bands of land, sea, and sky framed by majestic pine trees, is profoundly indebted to the classical landscape tradition of Poussin, which Cézanne used to organise his sensations before nature. At the same time, Cézanne’s constructive transformation of the townscape into an architectural geometry of flat, overlapping planes is powerfully modern, as the next generation of the avant-garde would recognise.  “The discovery of his work overturned everything,” exclaimed Braque, who traveled to L’Estaque repeatedly during the formative years of cubism.



Sotheby's 2014




Paul Cézanne
BAIGNEURS
LOT SOLD. 3,666,500 GBP



Paul Cézanne
FEMME ASSISE (MADAME CÉZANNE)
LOT SOLD. 3,554,500 GBP



Paul Cézanne
LE VERGER
LOT SOLD. 338,500 GBP
Sotheby's 2013 



Paul Cézanne
LES POMMES
LOT SOLD. 41,605,000 USD
Les Pommes, painted by Cézanne in 1889-90, reveals why his work in the still-life genre is considered among his greatest achievements (est. $25/35 million). These moving compositions, which explore the paradoxes of forms in space, inspired the Cubism of Picasso and Braque and signal the very birth of modern art. 
Les Pommes is one of Cezanne’s most perfect still lifes” commented Charles Moffett, Vice Chairman ofSotheby’s Impressionist & Modern Art department. “One could never imagine altering a single brushstroke or touch of color. The painting was a highlight of any visit to the Lewyts’ home, which was filled with works they dearly loved – from small pictures the size of playing cards to important drawings, watercolors and sculpture."



Paul Cézanne
LA CÔTE DU JALLAIS À PONTOISE
LOT SOLD. 605,000 USD




Paul Cézanne
PAYSAGE
LOT SOLD. 485,000 USD

Paul Cézanne
AUTOUR DE LA TABLE
LOT SOLD. 137,000 USD

Sotheby's 2012




Paul Cézanne
FLEURS DANS UN VASE ROUGE
LOT SOLD. 3,218,500

Paul Cézanne
LA FEMME À L'HERMINE, D'APRÈS LE GRECO
Estimate 5,000,0007,000,000 USD



Paul Cézanne
FEMME NUE DEBOUT
LOT SOLD. 5,346,500 USD 

Sotheby's 2011

Paul Cézanne
LA RIVIÈRE
Lot sold 2,505,250 GBP
 Sotheby's 2010




Paul Cézanne
PICHET ET FRUITS SUR UNE TABLE
LOT SOLD. 11,801,250 GBP
 Sotheby's 2008



Paul Cézanne
PAYSAGE DES BORDS DE L'OISE
Estimate 8,000,00012,000,000 USD






Paul Cézanne
VERRE ET POIRES
LOT SOLD. 4,073,250 GBP





CHRISTIE’S 2014





Pr.$4,645,000


CHRISTIE’S 2012









CHRISTIE’S 2011





CHRISTIE’S 2010





CHRISTIE’S 2009





CHRISTIE’S 2008






CHRISTIE’S 2007







Thomas Eakins at Auction and at the National Gallery (Washington DC)

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BIOGRAPHY

Thomas Cowperthwait Eakins was born in 1844 in Philadelphia, the first-born and only male of the four children of Benjamin Eakins and Caroline Cowperthwait. His father was a calligrapher and writing master, who supported his family in comfortable circumstances by his profession and through prudent investments. Eakins was raised in the family home at 1729 Mount Vernon Street and would live there for the rest of his life (it still stands). He graduated from the Central High School in Philadelphia and in 1862 began to take courses at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and attended anatomy lectures there and at the Jefferson Medical College. In 1866 he went to Paris, where he attended the École des Beaux-arts and studied with the French painters Jean-Léon Gérôme, who permanently influenced him, and Léon Bonnat and the sculptor Augustin Alexandre Dumont. Before returning to the United States he spent six months in Spain. He greatly admired Spanish painting, particularly the art of Velázquez, which would also be lastingly influential.
Eakins returned to Philadelphia in 1869, where he remained to the end of his life. He resumed his studies at the Jefferson Medical College, and in 1878 he began teaching at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where he was appointed professor of Painting and drawing the next year. On January 19, 1884, he married Susan Hannah Macdowell, a student at the academy. In his teaching, Eakins was steadfast in his insistence on painting from the nude model. The controversy surrounding this practice led to his dismissal, with an aroma of scandal, from the professorship in 1886.
Eakins' fame is almost entirely posthumous. He was little known and admired in his native city--when John Singer Sargent visited Philadelphia in 1903 and was asked what artist he would like to meet, he said "There's Eakins, for instance." The reply was, "And who is Eakins."--and even less known outside it. Eakins died in Philadelphia in 1916, at the age of seventy-one. 

Sotheby's 2012




Thomas Eakins
1844 - 1916
PORTRAIT OF FRANCESCO ROMANO
LOT SOLD. 146,500



Thomas Eakins
UNTITLED (PORTRAIT OF A GIRL IN PUFF SLEEVES)
LOT SOLD. 18,750


Bonhams 2012




Thomas Eakins (American, 1844-1916)
Portrait of Rebecca MacDowell (Mrs. J. Randolph Garrett), circa 1908
 20 1/4 x 16in
US$ 70,000 - 90,000

Christie's 2011








Study for Portrait of the Very Reverend John J. Fedigan








Christie’s 2009






Christie’s 2007



Pr.$78,000


National Gallery (Washington DC)



Eakins, Thomas
, American, 1844 - 1916
The Biglin Brothers Racing
1872
oil on canvas
overall: 61.2 x 91.6 cm (24 1/8 x 36 1/16 in.)
framed: 74.9 x 105.7 x 5.4 cm (29 1/2 x 41 5/8 x 2 1/8 in.)
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney






Eakins, Thomas
, American, 1844 - 1916
Baby at Play
1876
oil on canvas
overall: 81.9 x 122.8 cm (32 1/4 x 48 3/8 in.)
framed: 106.7 x 147.3 cm (42 x 58 in.)
John Hay Whitney Collection
1982.76.5




Eakins, Thomas 
American, 1844 - 1916
The Poleman in the Ma'sh
c. 1881
brown wash heightened with white over graphite and black chalk
overall: 28 x 15.1 cm (11 x 5 15/16 in.)
Julius S. Held Collection, Avalon Fund
1984.3.9





Eakins, Thomas
, American, 1844 - 1916
The Chaperone
c. 1908
oil on canvas
overall: 46.3 x 36.2 cm (18 1/4 x 14 1/4 in.)
framed: 63.5 x 53.3 x 8.3 cm (25 x 21 x 3 1/4 in.)
Gift of John Wilmerding, in Honor of the 50th Anniversary of the National Gallery of Art
1991.34.1



Eakins, Thomas
, American, 1844 - 1916
Rear Admiral George W. Melville
1905
oil on canvas
overall: 101.6 x 68.5 cm (40 x 26 15/16 in.)
framed: 115.6 x 82.6 x 5.1 cm (45 1/2 x 32 1/2 x 2 in.)
Gift (Partial and Promised) of Senator and Mrs. H. John Heinz III, in Honor of the 50th Anniversary of the National Gallery of Art
1991.33.1




Eakins, Thomas
, American, 1844 - 1916
Archbishop Diomede Falconio
1905
oil on canvas
overall: 183.2 x 137.7 cm (72 1/8 x 54 3/16 in.)
framed: 204.5 x 159.4 x 6 cm (80 1/2 x 62 3/4 x 2 3/8 in.)
Gift of Stephen C. Clark
1946.16.1
 




Eakins, Thomas
, American, 1844 - 1916
Annie C. Lochrey Husson (Mrs. Louis Husson)
c. 1905
oil on canvas
overall: 61.1 x 50.9 cm (24 1/16 x 20 1/16 in.)
framed: 79.4 x 69.2 x 7 cm (31 1/4 x 27 1/4 x 2 3/4 in.)
Gift of Katharine Husson Horstick
1957.2.2




Eakins, Thomas
, American, 1844 - 1916
Harriet Husson Carville (Mrs. James G. Carville)
1904
oil on canvas
overall: 51 x 40.7 cm (20 1/16 x 16 in.)
framed: 74.8 x 62.4 x 7 cm (29 7/16 x 24 9/16 x 2 3/4 in.)
Gift of Elizabeth O. Carville
1976.27




Eakins, Thomas
, American, 1844 - 1916
Louis Husson
1899
oil on canvas
overall: 61 x 50.9 cm (24 x 20 1/16 in.)
framed: 76.2 x 66 x 6.7 cm (30 x 26 x 2 5/8 in.)
Gift of Katharine Husson Horstick
1957.2.1



Renoir at Auction

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Sotheby’s 4 November 2009 Evening Sale of Impressionist and Modern Art in New York 



Included in the November offering were three works by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. 


Femme au chapeau blanc belongs to a series of oils that Renoir completed in the early 1890s of young women wearing elaborately decorated chapeaux (est. $2.5/3.5 million, £1.5/2 million, €1.8/2.5 million). During the 1890s, Renoir’s life was divided into two distinct parts, both are reflected in his work. On one side were his elite clientele whom he depended upon for portrait commissions and on the other were the lesser-known models, most often young girls, whose youth and beauty enraptured Renoir. While painting formal society portraits sustained the artist’s way of life, his studies of unidentified young women allowed him greater freedom of execution. The present picture is an example of Renoir’s bravura - his rapid feathery brushstrokes lavish attention upon the crisp fabric of the model’s dress, the pleating over her shoulder and the airy crinoline of her hat. 




Also by Renoir is Baigneuse, which offers a superb example of his later style,exemplifying his ability to capture the female form with his fluid, loose brushwork (est. $700,000/1million, £400/600,000, €500/700,000). His masterly painting technique builds up a shimmering paint surface that gives his late nudes their distinctive quality; a style that allowed him to showcase an astonishing mastery of a broad range of painterly effects. It was these late monumental nudes that for many comprised Renoir’s greatest artistic achievement and provided an important source of inspiration for Cézanne and Picasso’s neo-classical nudes. 




Renoir’s still-lives, including Nature Morte aux Pommes et Poires, are some of the most sensually appealing compositions in art history(est. $350/450,000, £200/300,000, €250/350,000). Rendered with the artist’s characteristically soft palette, these compositions capture the aromatic beauty of each succulent piece of fruit. These deceptively simple still-lives, which proved to be wildly popular among clients of Paul Durand-Ruel, revitalized this age-old subject with an Impressionist flair. 




Christie’s Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale in London on 6 February 2013  




L'ombrelle, 1878, by Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)

was painted during the height of Impressionism (estimate: £4-7million). In this radiant painting, Pierre-Auguste Renoir depicts the quintessential Impressionist subject of the fashionably attired Parisienne within a scene of abundantly flowering nature. A celebration of both female elegance and natural beauty, the subject provided bountiful opportunities for Renoir to deconstruct form and experiment with palette. The variegated brushwork consisting of thick and swirling impasto and small dabs of spontaneous and audaciously applied paint, make L'ombrelle one of the artist’s most experimental works of the latter part of the decade. The picture exemplifies Renoir’s ideal of harmoniously integrating a figure into an outdoor setting, and of capturing the myriad effects of light and shade in a range of dazzling colours. L'ombrelle relates to a sequence of exuberantly painted canvases depicting women in garden settings that Renoir executed in the years immediately following the very first Impressionist exhibition of 1874. Having first explored the theme of the woman with an umbrella or parasol as early as 1867, in



Lise à l'ombrelle, these later works may have been inspired by the example of Claude Monet, whom Renoir had visited at his home in Argenteuil during the summer months of 1873 to 1875.




SOTHEBY’S NOVEMBER 2007





Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s Femmes dans un jardin is a magnificent landscape executed during the artist’s classic Impressionist period.The lush, rich treatment of the park with its flowerbeds, trees and the path in the present work demonstrates the delight Renoir took in painting nature, drenched in light and shimmering with color. 



Sotheby's 2014




Estimate
400,000600,000


Sotheby's 2011 


Pierre-Auguste Renoir
LA BAIGNEUSE
LOT SOLD. 2,322,500 USD



Christie's November 5, 2014





 Sotheby's May 7 2014



PIERRE-AUGUSTE RENOIR 

TULIPES
Estimate   1,500,000 — 2,000,000


Christie's 2015




Est. £70,000 - £100,000
($105,910 - $151,300)




 




Christie's 2014

 

Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
Jeunes filles jouant au volant
Pr.$11,365,000




Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
Femme à l'ombrelle
Pr.$2,517,000 




Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
Les deux soeurs
Pr.$8,005,000




Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
Paysage avec figures
Pr.$1,925,000



Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
Nu au chapeau de paille assis en bordure de
Pr.£1,138,850($1,810,772)



Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
Mademoiselle Grimprel au ruban rouge
Pr.£3,065,250($4,873,748)



Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
Coucher de soleil à Douarnenez
Pr.£469,250($746,108)
 
Christie's 2013









 
Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
Baigneuse accoudée
Pr.£1,721,250($2,692,035)


Christie's 2012








 

 Christie's 2009




 

  


 Christie's 2008








 


 


 


 Christie's 2007




 


 


 


 




GUY WIGGINS at AUCTION I

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 Christie’s  2014









Christie’s  2013








Christie’s  2012









PR.$98,500





 


 


Christie’s 2010


GUY WIGGINS (1883-1962)

LOWER FIFTH AVENUE AT NIGHT

Estimate $100,000 - $150,000 Price Realized  $146,500 



Christie’s  2006







Christie’s  2005






Sotheby’s Surrealist Art Evening Sale 3rd February 2015

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On 3February 2015, Sotheby’s London will present masterworks of Surrealist Art in a dedicated Evening sale which will stand alongside the Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale.


The market for Surrealist Art has continued to grow from strength to strength in recent years, with new benchmarks set in the field at Sotheby’s each season, including the highest price at auction for any work by Salvador Dalí, Joan Miró, René Magritte and Francis Picabia. 

James Mackie, Sotheby’s Senior Director, Impressionist & Modern Art, said: “This year’s dedicated Surrealist sale offers an extremely rich and broad range of works by the key names of the Surrealist art movement. The outstanding works, many of which are fresh to the market having remained in private collections for decades, have each been selected to represent the artists at their best.” 




René Magritte
L’explication
oil on canvas 80 by 60cm, 31 1/2 by 23 5/8in. Painted in 1952 Estimate: £4 - 6 million


Important highlights of the forthcoming February sale include René Magritte’s L’explication, which comes to the market from a private collection for the first time in 35 years, Yves Tanguy’s extremely fine painting Deux fois du noir, and the finest group of Picabia's celebrated ‘Transparence’ paintings ever to come to the market.

Painted  in 1952, Magritte’s L’explication is among his most compelling in engagements with the Surrealist interrogation and transformation of the object. The foreground of the composition is dominated by a striking amalgamation of bottle and carrot that sits on a solid wooden table surrounded by examples of its constituent parts, through which Magritte explores the idea that the combination of two related objects could create a poetic dynamic just as intense as the combination of two completely incongruous objects. 





Yves Tanguy
Deux fois du noir
Oil on canvas
53.5 by 74cm, 21 by 291⁄8in. 

ainted in 1941
Estimate: £2 - 3 million 



Deux fois du noir exemplifies the refined and personal language with which Tanguy transformed the boundaries of Modernist painting. Tanguy was invited by André Breton to become a member of the Surrealist group in 1925 and two years laterhe was a highly accomplished painter in complete command of a new and personal Surrealist language. Tanguy's pictorial forms are unique in the canon of Surrealist art, amorphous yet somehow recognisable to the viewer. With a great sense of mystery, Tanguy presents inDeux fois du noir a brilliant hyper-reality that embodies the aims of the Surrealist movement. 




Paul Delvaux
Le Train Bleu or La Rue Aux Tramways 
 Oil on board 122 by 244cm; 48 by 96in. 
Painted in November 1946 Est. £2.5 - 3.5 million 

Painted in November 1946, Paul Delvaux’s monumental work Le train bleu, alternatively known as La rue aux tramways, is one of the most important and remarkable paintings from the peak of his career. Although the artist was acquainted with the leading figures of the Surrealist group, including André Breton and Paul Eluard, his form of Surrealism remained unique. Capturing the modernity of the urban landscape juxtaposed with the sensuality of the nude form, this monumental work is an exceptional example of the paintings he was producing at this critical time in his oeuvre. 



Óscar Domínguez

Toro y Torero (Composition au Taureau)
oil on canvas 106.8 by 77.5cm, 42 by 30 1/2in. Painted circa 1934-35 Estimate: £1.3-2 million

Toro y Torero is one of Óscar Domínguez’s most important compositions from the peak of the artist’s career, and works of such calibre rarely come to the market. Domínguez’s works from this period shares its magical, dreamlike aesthetic with other Surrealist painters such as Ernst and Dalí, but as with many of his Spanish compatriots, the subject of his production retained a strong nationalistic streak.  

Toro y Torero is an especially important work in the artist’s œuvre because of its references to Spanish culture, religion and corrida (central to many Iberian artists’ depiction of conflict). The first owner
of Toro y Torero was the leader of the Surrealist group André Breton who possessed an outstanding collection of important works by avant-garde artists of the post-war period. Much of Breton’s collection has found its way into museums across the world, including the Musée National d’Art Moderne in Paris and the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The present work remained in in his family until 2003, when his collection was sold at auction in Paris. 





Francis Picabia
Lunaris
Oil, brush and ink and black crayon on panel 120 by 94.5cm; 471⁄4 by 371⁄4in.
Painted circa 1929
Est. £800,000 – 1.2 million 


Painted circa 1929, Lunaris is an exceptional example of Picabia's celebrated ‘Transparence’ paintings that Picabia executed in the late 1920s and early 1930s. This series of works, which was a marked departure from the artist’s Dadist experiments of the previous decades, derived its name from the multiple layers of overlapping imagery that Picabia employed and is characterised by figurative images underpinned by a Classical beauty. 

The first owner of the present work was the influential French art dealer Léonce Rosenberg (1879-1947) who greatly admired Picabia’s work and commissioned several paintings for his home. 

As the Museum of Modern Art, New York announced a major Picabia retrospective, scheduled for November 2016, the sale will present two other ‘Transparence’ paintings, including 

 
 Lunis, also from circa 1929, (est. £800,000- 1,200,000) 




and Espagnole et Agneau de l'Apocalypse, from circa 1927-1928 (est. £160,000-200,000). 




René Magritte
Les belles réalités
Gouache on paper 34.5 by 26cm.; 131⁄2 by 101⁄4in Executed in 1962 Est. £700,000-1,000,000 

Executed in 1962,Les belles réalités will now be offered at auction for the very first time. A witty and compelling example of Magritte’s preoccupation with the unexpected juxtaposition of objects, the painting features the most iconic element to appear in his work - that of the apple. Both the apple and table are closely associated with the tradition of still life painting, which make them the ideal subjects for a Surrealist work. The present work is remarkable for its bright tones and intricate brushwork which reveals the brilliant talent of the painter and the importance of gouache in his oeuvre. 




Salvador Dali
Cinq personnages surréalistes: femmes à tête de fleurs, femme à tiroirs (évocation du jugement de paris)
Gouache, brush and ink on pink paper
48.9 by 63.8cm; 191⁄4 by 251⁄8in.

Executed in 1937
Est. £400,000 - 600,000 


Executed in 1937 as a present for the renowned fashion designer Elsa Schiaparelli, this exquisite drawing exemplifies the blend of hyperrealism and surreal metamorphosis that was a hallmark of Dalí’s mature style. The work also brilliantly combines some of the artist’s most iconic transformations of the female figure. Dalí and Schiaparelli met in the 1930s and subsequently collaborated on a number of projects. The fashion designer owned a number of works by the artist, including both the present work – for which she apparently specified the use of pink paper – and the earlier oil Printemps nécrophilique.

THE FRICK COLLECTION: COYPEL’S DON QUIXOTE TAPESTRIES,PAINTINGS,PRINTS,AND BOOKS

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February 25 through May 17, 2015



Cervantes’s Don Quixote is considered by many to be among the greatest works of fiction ever written. From the publication in 1605 of the first of two volumes (the second followed ten years later, exactly 400 years ago), the novel enjoyed immense popularity. Reprints and translations spread across Europe, with the adventures of the knight Don Quixote and his companion, Sancho Panza, captivating the continental imagination and influencing both the performing and visual arts.



Coypel’s Don Quixote Tapestries: Illustrating a Spanish Novel in Eighteenth-Century France is devoted to a series of tapestries by Charles Coypel (1694−1752), painter to Louis XV, which illustrates twenty-eight of the novel’s most celebrated episodes and woven at the Gobelins Manufactory in Paris.




The exhibition includes three Gobelins tapestry panels from the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles and two Flemish tapestries inspired by Coypel from The Frick Collection, which have not been on view in more than ten years.



These are joined by five of Coypel’s original paintings (never before seen in New York), called cartoons (from the Italian cartone), that were used as full-scale preparatory designs for the tapestries, on loan from the Palais Impérial de Compiègne and the Musée Jacquemart-André, Paris.



The series is completed by eighteen prints and books from the Hispanic Society of America, New York.



An accompanying catalogue explores Coypel’s role in illustrating Don Quixoteand the circumstances that made his designsthe most renowned pictorial interpretations of the novel.



A rich program of lectures, seminars, and salon evenings explores the history of the novel and its 2influence on print, tapestry, film, ballet, and opera from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries.



The exhibition is organized by Charlotte Vignon, Curator of Decorative Arts, The Frick Collection, and is made possible by The Florence Gould Foundation with additional support from the Grand Marnier Foundation.



CHARLES COYPEL,ROYAL PAINTER TO LOUIS XV



Charles Coypel was born into a family of distinguished French painters. Both his grandfather, Noël Coypel (1628−1707), and his father, Antoine Coypel (1661−1722), were directors of the prestigious Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture, and, on several occasions, also produced paintings to be reproduced as tapestries at the Gobelins Manufactory. In 1715, Antoine was appointed First Painter to the King, a title Charles would inherit in 1747.



In 1714, the young Charles Coypel was asked to collaborate with the Gobelins Manufactory in what would become one of its most celebrated series of tapestries: The Story of Don Quixote. Between 1714 and 1734, he delivered twenty-seven paintings, and a last one in 1751, just before his death.



Coypel is believed to have selected the scenes and also determined the order in which he would paint them. Eight cartoons illustrate episodes from the first part of the novel—in which Don Quixote and Sancho Panza embark on foolish, often comical adventures—while the remaining twenty paintings illustrate scenes from the second part, in which the two protagonists evolve from buffoons to heroes.



For the selection of scenes and compositions, Coypel was influenced by contemporary French theater. By the early eighteenth century, numerous plays, ballets, and operas had retold and interpreted the adventures of Don Quixote for both the court and the popular audience. Coypel himself was a playwright, whose first two plays were inspired by Cervantes’s novel. Though not a success, Don Quichotte—written when Coypelwas only eighteen—demonstrates his familiarity with the tale. In 1720, when Coypel was painting the cartoons for the Gobelins, he wrote a second interpretation. Titled Les Folies de Cardenio, it was performed five times before the court, with the young Louis XV participating in the ballet. For the tapestry designs, Coypel created images of Don Quixote that would be familiar to theatrical audiences. His characters use gestures and postures seen on stage, and on several occasions, Coypel included a theater-like curtain(,



)THE STORY OF DON QUIXOTEAT THE GOBELINS ROYAL MANUFACTORY



Founded in 1663, the Gobelins Royal Manufactory produced sumptuous furnishings for the French king’s residences and lavish diplomatic gifts that spread his glory to foreign courts.



Woven nine times between 1717 and 1794, The Story of Don Quixoteis one of the Gobelins’s most celebrated tapestry series. The number of panels and the selection of Coypel’s scenes varied with each weaving. The first weaving (1717−19), for example, included the first fifteen scenes painted by Coypel while the eight weaving (1763−87) had sixty-seven panels, including three that are in the exhibition.





At least six panels of the fifth weaving were hung in the 1750s in Louis XV’s apartments in the Château de Marly. Others were presented as diplomatic gifts—like the three Getty panels in the exhibition—or purchased by distinguished clients. A total of about two hundred panels from The Story of Don Quixote were woven during the eighteenth century. Each panel presents a central scene by Coypel framed by a trompe-l’oeil carved and gilded wooden frame that appears to be hung on a wall covered in yellow or red fabric. The scenes are surrounded by a decorative border of flowers, animals, and other motifs related to the adventures of Don Quixote. This border, known as an alentour, was originally designed by Jean-Baptiste Belin de Fontenay père (1653−1717) and Claude Audran III (1658−1734).



Unlike Coypel’s scenes, which remained unchanged throughout the eighteenth century, the alentour was modified on six occasions to adapt to new tastes and fashions. All the versions, however, retain the initial idea of creating a highly decorative border that could be shortened in length, as this allowed the tapestries to be slightly adjustable in size, according to the taste or need of the owner.



Tapestries consist of warps—fixed threads, usually of undyed wool—and colored wefts that are interwoven with the base warp to create the image. The Don Quixote tapestries were woven on high-warp looms, with the exception of the seventh weaving, which was produced on low-warp looms. On high-warp looms, the warp threads were stretched vertically. In order to weave an exact reproduction of the painted scene, the cartoon was hung on a wall behind the weaver, who looked at the reflection in a mirror placed on the wall in front of him. Only a few cartoons have survived today, and most are in poor condition. Coypel’s Don Quixote scenes are no exception. Because of their enduring success, the paintings needed to be restored several times during the eighteenth century. Coypel’s hand is no longer visible on the cartoons used for multiple weavings, but those woven only once or twice—such as the examples presented in the exhibition—show most of their original surface.



THE ENDURING SUCCESS OF CHARLES COYPEL’S STORY OF DON QUIXOTE“



I’ll wager that before long there won’t be a tavern, an inn, a hostelry, or a barbershop where the history of our deeds isn’t painted.”



Uttered by Sancho Panza, these boastful words would prove prophetic. Charles Coypel’s paintings gained wide exposure and additional fame from a series of twenty-five black-and-white engravings made between 1723 and 1734 under his personal direction.(Fourteen arei ncluded in the exhibition.)



Printmakers worked from preparatory drawings made by Coypel after his own paintings, which explains the inscription Coypel invenit, (designed by Coypel) rather thanCoypel pinxit (painted by Coypel) at the lower left of each plate. Accessible to only a few wealthy patrons, the tapestries remained luxury items throughout the centuries while the engravings were affordable to a larger public. Thousands of sheets were printed and sold individually or in folios. Reproduced and reduced in size, the prints also illustrated other editions of Cervantes’s novel, not only in French but in English and Dutch as well. In 1746, the engravings after Coypel even became a substitute for Cervantes’s words in the lavish book of the Dutch publisher Pieter de Hondt, who cut part of the novel to accommodate the large plates. Four of these early editions are on view.



With this series of engravings, Coypel became the most influential eighteenth-century illustrator of Cervantes’s novel. Throughout the eighteenth century, Coypel’s designs continued to influence tapestry production in France and abroad. Around 1730−45, the Brussels workshop of Peter van den Hecke produced a series of eight tapestries illustrating Don Quixote, with six of them inspired by engravings after Coypel, two of which belong to The Frick Collection.



Visually different from the Gobelins Don Quixote tapestries, the scenes cover the entire surface of the tapestry panel and are surrounded by a simple border that simulates a carved and gilded frame. The designer of the cartoons, Philippe de Hondt, created the new compositions by adapting, or combining, elements from engravings after Coypel. Working within a Flemish tradition, de Hondt transposed Coypel’s figures to a village scene recalling pictures by David Teniers the Younger rather than setting his figures on an eighteenth-century French stage. Appreciated abroad, seven Van den Hecke panels, including the two Frick tapestries, were acquired by the French court in 1748, when the same court was sponsoring the production of the Gobelins Don Quixote tapestries. A year later, the Flemish tapestries were displayed at the Château de Compiègne in the study of Louis, Dauphin of France, son of Louis XV.With these two Flemish tapestries, the exhibition brings Coypel’s designs full circle—from the original cartoons to the woven Gobelins tapestries to reproductions in prints and books and later tapestries from the workshop of Peter van den Hecke.



PUBLICATION



The exhibition is accompanied by an illustrated catalogue written by Charlotte Vignon, the Frick’s Curator of Decorative Arts, with a forward by acclaimedliterarytranslator Edith Grossman. 

Images





1.Workshop of Peter van den Hecke (Flemish, 1680−1752)after Philippe de Hondt(Flemish, 1683−1741)Arrival of the Shepherdesses at the Wedding of Camacho,1730−45 (before 1748)Wool and silk10 feet 3 inches x 18 feet 3 inches The Frick Collection, New York (1965.10.20)Photo: Michael Bodycomb



1a.Workshop of Peter van den Hecke (Flemish, 1680−1752)after Philippe de Hondt (Flemish, 1683−1741)Arrival of the Shepherdesses at the Wedding of Camacho (detail),1730−45 (before 1748)Wool and silk10 feet 3 inches x 18 feet 3 inches The Frick Collection, New York (1965.10.20)Photo: Michael Bodycomb



1b.Workshop of Peter van den Hecke (Flemish, 1680−1752)after Philippe de Hondt (Flemish, 1683−1741)Arrival of the Shepherdesses at the Wedding of Camacho (detail),1730−45 (before 1748)Wool and silk10 feet 3 inches x 18 feet 3 inches The Frick Collection, New York (1965.10.20)Photo: Michael Bodycomb



1c. Workshop of Peter van den Hecke (Flemish, 1680−1752)after Philippe de Hondt (Flemish, 1683−1741)Arrival of the Shepherdesses at the Wedding of Camacho (detail),1730−45 (before 1748)Wool and silk10 feet 3 inches x 18 feet 3 inches The Frick Collection, New York (1965.10.20)Photo: Michael Bodycomb



2.Workshop of Peter van den Hecke(Flemish, 1680−1752)after Philippe de Hondt (Flemish, 1683−1741)Sancho Departs for the Island of Barataria, 1730−45 (before 1748)Wool and silk10 feet 4 inches x 19 feet 5 inches The Frick Collection, New York (1965.10.21)Photo: Michael Bodycomb



2a. Workshop of Peter van den Hecke (Flemish, 1680−1752)after Philippe de Hondt (Flemish, 1683−1741)Sancho Departs for the Island of Barataria (detail), 1730−45 (before 1748)Wool and silk10 feet 4 inches x 19 feet 5 inches The Frick Collection,New York (1965.10.21)Photo: Michael Bodycomb



2b.Workshop of Peter van den Hecke (Flemish, 1680−1752)after Philippe de Hondt (Flemish, 1683−1741)Sancho Departs for the Island of Barataria (detail), 1730−45 (before 1748)Wool and silk10feet 4 inches x 19 feet 5 inchesThe Frick Collection, New York (1965.10.21)Photo: Michael Bodycomb



2c.Workshop of Peter van den Hecke (Flemish, 1680−1752)after Philippe de Hondt (Flemish, 1683−1741)Sancho Departs for the Island of Barataria (detail), 1730−45 (before 1748)Wool and silk10 feet 4 inches x 19 feet 5 inches The Frick Collection, New York (1965.10.21)Photo: Michael Bodycomb



3.Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory (French) under the direction of Michel Audran (French, 1701−1771) and his son Jean Audran fils(French, d. 1794)Main scene after Charles Coypel (French, 1694−1752); alentours after Claude Audran III (French, 1658−1734), Jean-Baptiste Belin de Fontenay fils(French, 1668−1730), and Alexandre-François Desportes (French, 1661−1743)The Cowardice of Sancho at the Hunt, 1772 Wool and silk; modern cotton support straps and lining12 feet 1 inch x 13 feet 4 inches The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (82.DD.69) 



4.Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory (French) under the direction of Michel Audran (French, 1701−1771) and his son Jean Audran fils(French, d. 1794)Main scene after Charles Coypel (French, 1694−1752); alentoursafter Claude Audran III (French, 1658−1734), Jean-Baptiste Belin de Fontenay fils(French, 1668−1730), and Alexandre-François Desportes (French, 1661−1743)Sancho Arrives on the Island of Barataria, 1772 Wool and silk; modern cotton support straps and lining12 feet 1 inch x 13 feet 7 inchesThe J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (82.DD.68) 



5.Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory (French) under the direction of Michel Audran (French, 1701−1771) and his son Jean Audran fils(French, d. 1794)Main scene after Charles Coypel (French, 1694−1752); alentours after Claude Audran III (French, 1658−1734), Jean-Baptiste Belin de Fontenay fils(French, 1668−1730), and Alexandre-François Desportes (French, 1661−1743)Don Quixote Delivered from Folly by Wisdom, 1773Wool and silk; modern cotton support straps and lining12 feet 2 inches x 12 feet 8 inches The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (82.DD.66)



6.Charles Coypel (French, 1694−1752)Asleep, Don Quixote Fights the Wineskins, 1716Oil on canvas48 x 50 3/8 inches Palais Impérial de Compiègne; long-term loan from the Musée du Louvre, Paris (3560)Photo:©RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY



7.Charles Coypel (French, 1694−1752)The Distressed Countess Trifaldi, Afflicted by Her Beard, Implores Don Quixote toAvenge Her, probably 1716Oil on canvas48 3/8 x 51 inchesPalais Impérial de Compiègne; long-term loan from the Musée du Louvre, Paris (3575)Photo: ©RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY



8.Charles Coypel (French, 1694−1752)Don Quixote at Don Antonio Moreno's Ball, 1731Oil on canvas65 3/8 x 105 1/8 inches Palais Impérial de Compiègne; long-term loan from the Musée du Louvre, Paris (3566)Photo: ©RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY



9.Charles Coypel(French, 1694−1752)Don Quixote Consults the Enchanted Head at the House of Don Antonio Moreno, 1732 Oil on canvas621/4x 71 7/8 inchesPalais Impérial de Compiègne; long-term loan from the Musée du Louvre, Paris (3584)Photo: ©RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY



10.Charles Coypel (French, 1694−1752)Don Quixote Served by the Girls of the Inn, 1751Oil on canvas22 7/8 x 28 3/8 inches Musée Jacquemart-André, Paris —Institut de France (MJAP-P 2379)Photo: © Studio Sébert Photographes



Piero di Cosimo: The Poetry of Painting in Renaissance Florence

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Once-in-a-Lifetime Piero di Cosimo Retrospective Premieres at National Gallery of Art, Washington, February 1–May 3, 2015;

Travels to Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence, June 23–September 27, 2015


Piero di Cosimo, The Visitation with Saint Nicholas and Saint Anthony Abbot, c. 1489/1490, oil on panel, 184.2 x 188.6 cm (72 1/2 x 74 1/4 in.), National Gallery of Art, Washington, Samuel H. Kress Collection



Piero di Cosimo
The Visitation with Saint Nicholas and Saint Anthony Abbot, c. 1489/1490
oil on panel, 184.2 x 188.6 cm (72 1/2 x 74 1/4 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Samuel H. Kress Collection
The first major retrospective exhibition ever presented of paintings by the imaginative Italian Renaissance master Piero di Cosimo (1462–1522) will premiere at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, from February 1 through May 3, 2015. Piero di Cosimo: The Poetry of Painting in Renaissance Florence will showcase some 44 of the artist's most compelling works. With themes ranging from the pagan to the divine, the works include loans from churches in Italy and one of his greatest masterpieces, Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints Elizabeth of Hungary, Catherine of Alexandria, Peter, and John the Evangelist with Angels (completed by 1493), from the Museo degli Innocenti, Florence. Several important paintings will undergo conservation treatment before the exhibition, including the Gallery's Visitation with Saints Nicholas of Bari and Anthony Abbot (c. 1489–1490)—one of the artist's largest surviving works.

Exhibition Highlights

Showcased throughout six galleries in the West Building, the paintings on view will include altarpieces, images for private devotion, portraits, and mythological and allegorical scenes—some produced as a series and reunited for the exhibition.

Several religious works influenced by Leonardo, such as the  





Madonna and Child with Two Musician Angels (c. 1504–1507, Cini Collection),

will be on view alongside Piero's fanciful mythological inventions, including the renowned




Liberation of Andromeda (c. 1510–1513, Uffizi).

For many prominent families in Renaissance Florence, from the Capponi to the Strozzi, Piero created elaborate fables and singular mythological fantasies, the meanings of which continue to puzzle scholars. A strange and whimsical painting,  




The Discovery of Honey (c. 1500, Worcester Art Museum),

will be reunited with  




The Misfortunes of Silenus (c. 1500, Harvard Art Museums).  



The Hunt



and The Return from the Hunt (both c. 1485–1500, The Metropolitan Museum of Art)

illustrate a struggle for survival between man, satyrs, and wild beasts, with the distinctions not altogether clear among them.

Another of Piero's best-known spalliera panels (paintings set into the wall as wainscoting at about shoulder height, or on large pieces of furniture)— 




Construction of a Palace (c. 1514–1518, Ringling Museum of Art)—

will be on view, along with compelling portraits, including likenesses of the famed architect Giuliano da Sangallo and his father Francesco Giamberti (both c. 1482/1483, Rijksmuseum).

Four paintings will be on view only in Washington:  



Vulcan and Aeolus (c. 1490, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa),  



Madonna and Child with Saints Dominic, Nicholas of Bari, Peter, and John the Baptist (Pala del Pugliese) (c. 1481–1485, Saint Louis Art Museum),  



Madonna and Child with Saints John the Baptist, Margaret, Martin, and Angels (c. 1515–1518, Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa),

and one intimately scaled work attributed to Piero,  




Saint Veronica (c. 1510, private collection).

Piero di Cosimo (1462–1522)

As a pupil of Cosimo Rosselli, Piero di Cosimo began his career around 1480. A painter of the Florentine School and a contemporary of Botticelli, Leonardo, and Michelangelo, Piero was known in his day for his versatility as a painter of many different subjects, from the sacred to the profane, the latter often of beguiling meaning.

"His fantastic inventions rivaled the verses of the ancient poets whose myths and allegories he set out to transform in a wonderfully strange language all his own," said Gretchen Hirschauer, associate curator of Italian and Spanish paintings, National Gallery of Art.

The first and only exhibition on Piero di Cosimo in the United States was held in 1938 at the Schaeffer Galleries, New York, and included seven paintings attributed to the artist.

Curators and Catalogue

The curators of the exhibition in Washington are Gretchen Hirschauer, associate curator of Italian and Spanish paintings, National Gallery of Art; and Dennis Geronimus, associate professor of Italian Renaissance art history, New York University; assisted by Virginia Brilliant, The Ulla R. Searing Curator of Collections at The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, Sarasota, Florida; and Elizabeth Walmsley, painting conservator, National Gallery of Art. At the Uffizi, the curators include Daniela Parenti, head of the department of medieval to quattrocento art, Uffizi; Serena Padovani, former director, Galleria Palatina, Palazzo Pitti; and independent scholar Elena Capretti, under the guidance of Uffizi director Antonio Natali.



A fully illustrated scholarly catalogue in English will accompany the exhibition in Washington. Essays and catalogue entries on each exhibition object have been written by Brilliant, Geronimus, Hirschauer, Padovani, and Walmsley, in addition to David Franklin, independent scholar; Alison Luchs, curator of early European sculpture, National Gallery of Art; Duncan Bull, curator of international paintings at the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam; and Federica Zalabra, art historian, Galleria Nazionale dell'Umbria, Perugia. Relying on close formal, technical, and textual analysis, the authors not only argue for specific interpretations and cases of authorship but also address the social and religious functions of image making in the period.

Degas, Cézanne, Seurat The Dream Archive from the Musée d’Orsay

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For a few weeks, the Albertina will afford its visitors a glimpse into an archive of dreams when the Musée d’Orsay opens its vaults to lend the graphic gems of its collection for the first time ever to a museum outside of France from 30 January to 3 May 2015. This major presentation of 19th-century French art will feature 130 works. 

Delicate pastels by Edgar Degas, Georges Seurat and Odilon Redon, painterly gouaches by Honoré Daumier and Gustave Moreau, fine watercolours by Paul Cézanne, and works by salon artists who were highly esteemed in their day will come together to provide a sweeping look at the French art of drawing. 

Politically oriented realism will be seen as realised by its most prominent protagonists: social conflicts dealt with in the era’s courtrooms are exaggerated and contorted to the point of caricature by Honoré Daumier, while Gustave Courbet and Ernest Meissonier document barricade battles and significant political turning points on sheets of sketch paper. Giovanni Segantini and Jean-François Millet, on the other hand, bathe monumentally portrayed farmers and fisherfolk in a mystical light and show workers frozen still in poses that aestheticise their repetitive gestures. 

These socially motivated compositions will contrast provocatively with works by impressionist painters including Paul Cézanne with his sundrenched landscapes from the south of France, or Eugène Boudin with his airy, atmospheric market depictions. Both artists allow the bright radiance of their paper to shine through in places, and they bring a skilful lightness to bear in constructing their motifs out of nearly geometric surfaces. Light is also a key element in the works by Edgar Degas: his drawings observe dancers from hidden vantage points as they work through their private exercises and play out intimate scenes. And like Aristide Maillol, Degas also devotes himself to the classical genre of the nude, infusing it with seemingly banal everyday activities to give rise to something like a modern feminine divinity, a modern Venus. 

Alexandre Cabanel and Pierre-Auguste Renoir, on the other hand, show that despite all modern efforts, the 19th century’s second half still saw the traditions of the academie française held high: Cabanel’s The Birth of Venus represents the zenith of classicism after Ingres or Raphael, celebrating the classical ideal of beauty as well as the rules and tastes of the salon. And literary figures inhabit narrative masterpieces by Edward Burne-Jones, Jean Léon Gérome, and František Kupka, which this presentation places in dialogue with drawings that were created as book illustrations. These include Jean-Paul Laurens’s grisailles for Goethe’s Faust, a drawing by the Pre-Raphaelite William Holman Hunt for John Keats’s Isabella, and finally Maurice Denis’s illustrations for Les fiorettis de saint François d’Assise [Little Flowers of St. Francis].

Odilon Redon conjures up mysterious and puzzling depictions by breathing life into the technique of charcoal drawing: his “noirs” give form to a suggestive, spiritual world akin to the equally dark but pointillist drawings by Georges Seurat. These, done in black Conté crayon, are lent definition not by lines but by the contrast between the subtle nuances of the black drawing utensils and the whiteness of the paper - resulting in hazy and mysterious silhouettes. Felicien Rops and Gustave Moreau peer into the abysses of the human soul: their works show monsters and chimeras, and their reinventions of Salomé, Medea, and Medusa serve well to illustrate the notions that surrounded the turn-of-the-century femme fatale.

The way through this seemingly inscrutable labyrinth of styles, themes, and motifs that simultaneously captivated the 19th-century art world will be shown by Werner Spies, former director of the Musée National d’Art Moderne at the Centre Pompidou. Spies compiled the selection of works to be featured in this exhibition. 

And for the catalogue being published to mark the occasion, numerous artists, authors, filmmakers and architects have provided personal written contributions and interpretations of individual works as expressions of their bond of friendship with this esteemed curator.



Curator: Prof. Dr. Werner Spies


Introspection


Closing one’s eyes in order to behold one’s own self in the dark – this form of introspection caused many artists to portray themselves with their eyes in shadows. The mysterious darkness of their eyes expresses doubt, pain, delusion, and a fear of the unknown, of what lies beyond, of the face of the night – the fear of death.  The pain-stricken face of Charles Baudelaire, with its sorrowful eyes, stands out against ‘this blackness that produces light’ (Victor Hugo). The author of The Flowers of Evil sees man torn between an ideal world and world-weariness. Courbet presents himself as a disregarded and offended artist who has been insulted by society and defies the world as a free man, ‘un homme libre’, firmly holding on to his canvas. Jean-François Millet’s face betrays the melancholy accompanying artistic crises. Scrutinising his mirror image, Henri Fantin-Latour weighs it against the portray that appears behind his closed eyes, i.e., before the eye of his mind.   In Léon Spilliaert’s self-portrait, the eyes lie in deep, dark holes from which the mirror reflects the artist’s hallucinations about his own transience. Pain and a fear of death are also written all over the face of the German artist Lovis Corinth in the works from his late period. The older he grew, the more he was plagued with self-doubt and increasingly perceived a threatening infirmity in his mirror image.




Architectural Visions as the Spawn of Bourgeois Imagination


Delving into a dream in order to soar to the heady heights of unrealisable utopia: around the turn of the century, this was what François Garas was striving for. And because he thought that utility stood in the way of beauty, he refused to actually build things and committed himself entirely to thought experiments. His architecture was only realised on the drawing board and in the form of models. He dedicated his utopian temple complex to the freedom of thoughts and ideas. Unfolding into infinity, they are just as unlimited as the unfinished building itself. At the foot of the temple, Garas envisioned his own house, where he would develop his architecture in seclusion from the world. Other architects were dreaming of the past. Some felt the structure of the Eiffel Tower, a masterpiece of engineering, to be an expression of banality: on the occasion of the 1900 Paris Universal Exhibition, its construction elements were to be hidden. Henri Toussaint contrived a palace of electricity for which the base of the iron lattice tower should be generously concealed. The entire 19th century oscillated between the antipodes of a future-oriented belief in technology and a poetically distorted reality oriented towards the past – between the poles of utopia, realism, and a sense of longing for a lost idyll. The exhibition Archives of the Dream traces the 19th century’s fault lines between romanticisation and reality, between the Salon and the avant-garde. 







Labour and Time Standing Still 



Jean-François Millet
Harvesters Resting or Ruth and Boasz, sketch for the painting of the same title, 1850–1853
© Musée d´Orsay, Paris, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais, Hervé Lewandowski

In the art of Jean-François Millet and Giovanni Segantini, farm labourers and peasants returning from work at the fall of darkness bend under their heavy loads. Leaning out of their boats, fishermen throw their traps by moonlight. During the day, they relax in the sun and abandon themselves to daydreams. In such moments, time stands still. At dusk, however, when day and night blend together, movement stirs anew, and the farmer’s wife heads for home with her herd.

Millet and Segantini mark the beginning and the end of realism. Their drawings are separated by half a century, but they share the atmospheric and tranquil interpretation of peasants and farmworkers giving in to the cycle of life. These images are devoid of an acute presence, of accusation and pathos. They do not romanticise life in the countryside, in spite of their conciliatory, diffuse light. Neither do they deplore the social misery of the industrial age. These pictures also resemble each other in terms of the rhythmical repetition of movement: most simple gestures become symbols of human existence per se.



Honoré Daumier



Honoré Daumier
The Print Collectors, 1863–1865
Chalk, pen and black ink, watercolour
© Musée d´Orsay, Paris, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais, Tony Querrec
 

No one pilloried the faces of the bourgeoisie and its double moral standards more fittingly than Honoré Daumier. He exposed these self-righteous and haughty citizens to dazzling light and to the caricaturist’s scorn. Daumier’s victims were ivory-tower amateurs and collectors who preferred to stick with their own kind and mirror-gazing lawyers who thrust themselves into the limelight with the mendacity of hollow pathos.   

Daumier did not spare the privileged social strata. His caricatures extracted the truth from behind the scenes of the Second Empire and unveiled the complacency of its hypocritical upper middle classes. Parliamentarians, judges, barristers, and artists were the profiteers of the authoritarian regime of Napoleon III and a parliament that had deprived itself of control and had placed substantial power in the hands of corrupt courts.

:
Honoré Daumier
The Carnival Parade, ca. 1865
Chalk, pen and black ink, watercolour and gouache
© Musee d´Orsay, Paris, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais, Franck Raux


Yet Daumier also parodied the outsiders of society, figures related to the circus. The showman’s outcry goes unheard; the spectators remain indifferent, no matter how threatening the monster in the background may appear.

Daumier was the first prominent artist to resort to caricature as a medium of expression in realism, for only the exaggeration of reality allowed him to render its ugliness uncensored.



Ernest Meissonier

In June 1848, the working class unsuccessfully rose to protest against the abolition of the National Workshops, which had been introduced as a measure against unemployment. The young Second Republic, which had emerged from the demolished barricades in February 1848, brutally smashed the dream of equality and fraternity. An artillery captain in the National Guard, Ernest Meissonier participated in the fights and captured the events on the spot immediately after the barricades in the rue de la Mortellerie in Paris had been stormed. He produced a small, inconspicuous masterpiece, which due to its relentless observation of the revolutionaries’ mutilated bodies has been chosen as the historical prelude to The Archives of the Dream: an image that would gave birth to both the idylls fleeing the cruelty of reality and the resulting nightmares.  



Historicism and the Salon

Year after year, large crowds stormed the huge exhibitions of the Paris Salon in order to admire the latest paintings or pour scorn and derision on them to the critics’ applause. Past reviews of the Salon, whether expressing admiration or contempt, and today’s assessment of the works in question frequently diverge considerably. In the 19th century, Alexandre Cabanel was a celebrated artist, while Édouard Manet was misunderstood as a provocative agitator. Because of its feminine beauty, Cabanel’s Birth of Venus aroused enthusiasm, whereas Manet’s Odalisquewas vehemently rejected because of its ugliness. Manet’s Reclining Nude with a Cat likely depicts a prostitute, who looks at the spectator provocatively: an affront to academic tradition. Yet the poet and ‘social reporter’ Émile Zola was well aware that Manet’s Odalisque would pave the way for modernism. Such masters of idealising history painting as Lawrence Alma-Tadema or Jean-Paul Laurens soon fell into oblivion during the long years of the modernist era. Only recently have their works no longer been misunderstood as painted literature, but have been reassessed as autonomous and virtuoso products of visual narration.



Gustave Moreau

Gustave Moreau was a ‘collector of dreams’. Images came naturally to the mind of this shy, learned maverick, fired by myths and literary inspiration. Moreau preferred the jewel-like transparency of watercolour painting. He owed his imagination and inventiveness to his enormous visual memory and erudition. His works stand out against the dark visions of other Symbolists like glittering diamonds.

Like other escapists, Gustave Moreau was an anti-naturalist and vehement opponent of the depiction of modern life. He was fascinated by the poetry of the Old Masters in the Louvre. Far from being a history painter committed to archaeological accuracy, he presented his visions of dreams as an alternative to realism, surprising beholders with his reinterpretations of traditional subject matter. Long before Hofmannsthal and Richard Strauss, he had Salome engage in an erotic dialogue with the head of John the Baptist. 





Gustave Moreau
Oedipus and the Sphinx, 1882
© Musée d´Orsay, Paris, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais, Thierry Le Mage
 
In his Oedipus and the Sphinx, Moreau memorialised ‘the mystery of the woman’ before Freud appeared on the scene. Moreau’s preference for decorative detail and its sensual splendour and sumptuous surfaces derive from his knowledge of oriental weapons, garments, rugs, and jewellery.





Carlos Schwabe



Carlos Schwabe
Death and the Grave Digger, 1895 (watercoloured in 1900)
© Musée d´Orsay, Paris, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais, Jean-Gilles Berizzi
 

In his pictures, Carlos Schwabe hallucinates death as the fictitious body of the ‘femme fatale’ – a woman embodying the male fear of a death brought about by lust. The angel is a deathly female creature that holds the promise of final bliss – not in the guise of satanic depravity like in the case of Félicien Rops, but in the shape of a beautiful woman. The female angel of death, furnished with scythe-shaped wings, appears as a redeemer exonerating the gravedigger from his dreary existence. The angel’s smouldering colours recall those of the scarab, the Egyptian symbol of the sun god and of rebirth. 

In Schwabe’s art, winged female figures are guardian angels – be it that they protect man from adversity in the manner of archangels or that they relieve man from the burden of life through death. In his book illustrations for Le Rêve[The Dream] by Émile Zola, the writer’s least naturalistic novel, Schwabe, a Symbolist, saw plenty of room for his subjective interpretation of the story and illustrated scenes that cannot even be found in the novel. Zola, a Naturalist, complained about the lack of realism of the Symbolist images, which took the beholder to a phantasmagorical world. Convinced of the artistic merit of his illustrations, Schwabe exhibited them successfully at the Salon de la Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts before the book was published.




Félicien Rops

Rops shocked the public and attacked the Catholic Church. His pornographically drastic illustrations unsettled the prudish sexual morality of the 19th century. In his bizarre and highly inventive works, the artist mockingly and impiously roused the demons of repressed desires, which eventually closed in on society and its tabooed sexuality. Rops reinstated the mysterious force of voluptuousness and restored it to the devilish context to which it had been assigned by religion. According to the Symbolist poet Joris-Karl Huysmans, Rops’s designs can be referred to as ‘Catholic works’ for this very reason. 

In 1874, Rops settled in Paris, where he gave free rein to his talents and ideas as a graphic artist. He drew a series of illustrations for Barbey d’Aurevilly’s Les Diaboliques. On the frontispiece, a nude female figure nestles up against the cold stone of a sphinx and requests to be let in ‘on the supernatural secret of new sins and a voluptuousness undreamt of’ (Joris-Karl Huysmans). Satan, an elderly gentleman in a dark suit and with a monocle, is seated between the sphinx’s wings and listens lecherously. He is the symbol of an aged and exhausted society that has suppressed its sexual desires.



The Pre-Raphaelites and the Aestheticism of the 19th Century 

The dream of art’s renewal celebrated the past. William Holman Hunt vehemently rejected academism and its teachings, which relied on the ‘classical’ art of Raphael. In 1848, Hunt founded the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in London together with other artists. They pleaded for a return to an aestheticism void of pathos as it had prevailed during the period before Raphael and the Roman High Renaissance. Their drawings, characterised by precise contours and a lack of modelling, resembled those of medieval craftsmen. Outline drawings based on Italian frescoes of the Early Renaissance served as their guide. Nature was their unrelenting teacher and supreme model. 

Medieval devotional literature became a moral authority for the Pre-Raphaelites and their themes. They illustrated works by Dante and Petrarch, virtuous poetry of the early modern age, and Boccaccio’s Decameron. In deliberate opposition to early industrial mass production, Walter Crane sought to reassert the status of craftsmanship. In his book illustrations, he gave equal attention and care to the figural elements and to the floral ornaments in the decorative borders. 

Edward Burne-Jones aesthetically transfigured the games and intrigues between the sexes. His drawn head of the goddess of Fortune belongs to a ‘femme fragile’: the idealised yet no less fictitious counterpart of the menacing vamp, the man-devouring ‘femme fatale’. Delicately built, anaemic, and frail, she requires male protection. 



Rodolphe Bresdin

Bresdin was an ‘artiste maudit’ – a misjudged artist who was excluded from the official art scene and would ultimately deliberately choose the way into self-destructive isolation. Bresdin’s work relies on Dutch 17th-century art, on Rembrandt and Hercules Seghers. Bresdin’s style as a draughtsman is obsessive. He meticulously drew his landscapes with a great sense of precision, losing himself in detail, until a multitude of elements would overgrow a picture. Dense foliage and lush forests spring not from direct observation, but from uncontrolled fantasy. In these scenes, man is small and meaningless. Odilon Redon was Bresdin’s student, friend, and future apologist.



Eugène Boudin and the Landscapes of Gustave Doré and Edgar Degas 

Boudin’s watercolour brush seems to have swept across the surface spontaneously yet confidently, causing the transparent, scintillating patches and light-suffused silhouettes of a lively, colourful market in Brittany to blend in with the paper. He accurately sketched down the details and later carefully finished his sheets of studies.    

Eugène Boudin was one of the first painters to consider a fleeting moment – an ‘impression’ – worth depicting. What Boudin considered unpretentious souvenirs he had painted in front of the motif for summer visitors paved the way for the future generation of Impressionists, above all for Monet’s painting ‘en plein air’. 

Although Edgar Degas was primarily a figure painter, he also devoted himself to the landscape, this quintessential Impressionist genre. Here, too, he preferred the pastel with its creamy consistency and intensity so as to achieve soft transitions and brilliant colours. 

Degas’s contemporary Gustave Doré, a prolific illustrator, was also one of the leading landscapists in 19th-century France. In his landscape watercolours, which the enthusiastic mountaineer had painted in the Scottish Highlands in 1873, he dispensed with figures entirely. Drama and narration derive solely from the eloquent twilight, the gloomy sky, and the solitary, mysteriously glittering lake. Doré’s landscapes are dream-like, poetic visions inspired by contemporary literature. In their sublimeness, they hark back to works by William Turner and Gustave Courbet.






Women at Their Toilette


Edgar Degas
After the Bath (Woman Drying Her Neck), 1885/86
© Musee d´Orsay, Paris, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais, Herve Lewandowski
 

In the shadow and out of the limelight of the public stages on which actresses, dancers, and singers radiated with beauty and charisma, women pursued their trade in gloomy bars and dimly lit brothels. It was in the boudoirs of these establishments that Edgar Degas found the models for his pastels. When he went public with his works, the audience was appalled. The true-to-life depictions of these unadorned women and their profane corporeality contradicted the academic beauty ideal mainly because of their realistic postures. People preferred classical renderings of women in mythological guises and elegant poses, clearly composed with the possibility of public exhibition at the official Salons in mind.



Degas, on the other hand, presents women uncompromisingly captured in intimate activities and realistic contortions while washing, combing, or drying themselves. The washbowls and zinc tubs indicate the women’s routine of taking a bath before or after a client’s visit. Degas chose equally unconventional views, daring perspectives from above, and abruptly cropped motifs in order to emphasise both the women’s unselfconsciousness while engaging in their habitual actions and the intimate closeness of the spectator, who remains unnoticed by them.



Degas – Pastels and Monotypes

Degas saw himself not only as a decided draughtsman, but also as a declared colourist: irreconcilable opposites Degas managed to balance in his pastels. The brilliantly bright and colourful appearance of the pastel ideally suited the Impressionists in their ‘painting with light’.

The pastel technique, which was highly appreciated by Venetian and French painters because of the matt and velvety surface it produced, had reached its peak in the 18th century. For a pastel, pigments are applied in powdery layers and can then be loosely blended with a brush, which results in soft transitions and shimmering surfaces. Having disappeared almost entirely during the period of Neo-Classicism, the technique was revived and taken to a new zenith by Edgar Degas. With his parallel and cross-hatching, Degas succeeded in lending his pastels intensive surface textures without blending the colours. It is amazing that Degas, the master of light and breezy pastel painting, simultaneously paved the way for black monotype, which he used to render the dreary atmosphere in the dark backrooms of brothels.


Degas and the Ballet  



Edgar Degas
Spanish Dancer and Leg Studies, study for the pastel Dancer with a Tambourine, ca. 1882
Chalk and pastel
© Musee d´Orsay, Paris, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais, Adrien Didierjean


In countless drawings, studies, and pastels, Degas devoted himself to the subject of dance – the ballet: above all, to the young danseuses’ rehearsals and warm-up and stretching exercises. Unlike such Impressionist landscapists as Monet or Renoir, who sought to arrest a fleeting light atmosphere, Degas aspired to capture previously unnoticed movements by constantly varying his unpretentious motifs: ‘One must draw the same motif over and over again, ten times, a hundred times, in order to approximate reality as closely as possible.’ 

In the pastel, light effects and optical stimuli generated by the colours contribute to a great degree of realism. The dance that has been frozen in the picture is brought back to life so as to vividly convey its dynamism. 

In his pastels, Degas rarely depicted the public stage and more frequently rendered the world hidden behind it. As an ‘abonné’, a regular visitor to the Paris Opera, he had free access to the dance studio, where, from 1870 onwards, he observed not so much the stars and protagonists, but rather the pupils, the ‘petits rats’. He drew them during their hard training, their exercises at the barre, and their breaks or when they adjusted their costumes. In these private moments Degas caught them in intimate poses, which his contemporaries frequently felt to be unaesthetic and too ‘ordinary’.



Paul Cézanne



Paul Cézanne
Montagne Sainte-Victoire, 1900–1902
Graphite and watercolour
© Musée d´Orsay, Paris, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais, Tony Querrec
 

Southern light softly caresses the Montagne Sainte-Victoire, whose misty shape rises out of the surrounding land. The blue haze blends in with the white surface of the paper and directs our gaze into the depth. The atmosphere and the wide expanse of the landscape, with its trees, hills, and slopes, flicker and vibrate in pale yellow and green light reflections. Time stands still; neither time of day nor season diverts us from this dazzling play of colours and light. 

Paul Cézanne drew and painted by carefully rebuilding nature’s structure on the paper with the brush: like an architect. He has rendered the Château Noir, a castle in Provence, with a thin, pointed brush, whereas the rest of the scenery has been captured much more fluidly and generously. The transparent and modulated patches of colour leave large parts of the painting ground uncovered. In spite of all their lightness and brilliance, Cézanne’s watercolours are governed by a strict geometric structure. Cézanne responded to the fleetingness and momentariness preferred by his Impressionist friends with an entirely new pictorial stability that would set the trend for modernism. 

What appears to be a randomly composed still life or a green jug lost in its surroundings seems to have always existed, since all the elements are firmly rooted in the paper and the picture’s structure.






Georges Seurat and Neo-Impressionism


With his works, Georges Seurat succeeded in pinpointing the dream of eternity, reliability, stability, and universality in the visual arts. He drew and painted against Impressionism’s philosophy of coincidence, momentariness, spontaneity, and improvisation, meticulously putting his motifs together from a multitude of tiny dots. 







Georges Seurat
The Veil, ca. 1883
Conté crayon
© Musée d´Orsay, Paris, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais, Thierry Le Mage


Before Seurat applied his new principles to painting, he exhibited a number of drawings he referred to as ‘noirs’, just like Odilon Redon. Seurat used greasy chalks in various degrees of hardness, which allowed him to achieve subtle transitions. The silhouettes he created on the paper as if by magic are composed of delicate, yet extremely powerful contrasts of light and shade, which Seurat employed to examine the effects of chiaroscuro. 

Seurat’s cropping of the motif, by which he took the figures to the picture’s margins, was entirely new and unusual. He thus arrested his geometrically shaped figures within the sheet’s rectangle. Together with the artist’s complete renouncement of realistic detail, this results in the great inner monumentality of his drawings.  

Paul Signac was Seurat’s closest companion. As Seurat, the inventor of Pointillism and victor over Impressionism, died prematurely, Signac would eventually publicise his theories. The Belgian painter Théo van Rysselberghe also belonged to the Parisian circle of the Pointillists. He acted as a link to the artists of this avant-garde movement in Brussels.



Odilon Redon

The world of Odilon Redon presents itself to us as a disturbing nightmare, gloomy, mysterious, and enigmatic. Deadly smiling women in the form of spiders, devils wearing masks, underwater monsters, and Caliban, the animalistic slave in Shakespeare’s Tempest, take the beholder to an anxiety-ridden world of the unconscious that has been repressed by a purpose-oriented sense of reality. The charcoal, which is ‘devoid of any beauty’ (Redon) and which the artist employs to commit his dark, fantastic world to paper, makes the Symbolist an early explorer of the subconscious mind. He referred to his drawings as ‘noirs’ – black images – and thus named them after the ‘colour’ that is used to render the dark aspects of human abysses, similar to Stevenson’s Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. Redon’s bizarre and grotesque phantasmagorias were inspired by Hieronymus Bosch, ‘Hell Brueghel’, and Goya and made him the forerunner of the Surrealists and their depictions of horror.





Symbolism

Society had forgotten how to dream. Scientific knowledge, Darwinism, and awakening Freudianism called man’s self-concept into question. But what remains when an individual’s existence and mind are scrutinised down to the very last nook and cranny and even religion fails to supply answers to the final doubts? Symbolism attempted to offer remedies. Its spokesman, Joseph Péladan, proclaimed: ‘The Louvre will act as a substitute for Notre Dame’ and ‘The artist will rise to the position of priest, king, and magician.’ Art and literature were considered capable of expressing the unfathomable mystery, the invisible and unnameable aspects of the world. 


The Symbolists were not a homogeneous group, yet they shared an interest in new themes, which they discovered not only in Christian, but also in exotic theologies, as well as in mysticism, esotericism, spiritualism, and occultism.  

Léon Spilliaert obtained his inspiration from the port town of Ostend. Darkness, emptiness, dim lights in the city’s fine haze, and a bridge rendered in hardly discernible colours convey desolation and loneliness. 

William Degouve de Nuncques frequently painted park landscapes in the dark that exhibit confusing visual axes and lights. For his palette, the artist harked back to James McNeill Whistler and the latter’s penchant for a combination of painting and music. The Hungarian painter Jószef Rippl-Rónai, on the other hand, sought to imitate the appearance of negatives in photography: the light-coloured trees against the dark background lend his park the ghostly atmosphere of a dubious place.



Fin de siècle: Between Belle Époque and Classical Revival

Around the turn of the century, Salome and Medea were projection figures of a profoundly unsettled society in whose microcosm raged a war between the sexes: from Oscar Wilde to Otto Weininger and Richard Strauss – the ‘femme fatale’ lured men to their ruin. In Mariano Fortuny’s art, she even catapults the man out of the picture. 

Fortuny was a painter and fashion designer who invented new treatments of textile fabrics, including a technique for pleating silk. Salome triumphantly lifts the plate with the Baptist’s head to the upper margin of the picture, thus sparing the beholder the ghastly sight. Salome turns her back on us, presenting her sumptuous, elaborately draped robe. Splendour and beauty mitigate the horrible event.

In the work of Alfons Mucha, the applied arts were similarly seized by antique tragedy. On a poster design, the artist stylised the legendary actress Sarah Bernhardt in the guise of the vengeful heroine Medea and the children killed by her to the limits of legibility. Iconography came to be governed by ornament.   

As art threatened to be decoratively trivialised, artists sought refuge in the revival of classical art. Aristide Maillol started out as a designer of tapestries; after 1900, he turned his attention to sculpture, lending his monumental figures a statuary stability. After a sojourn in Greece, he was preoccupied with the idea of ‘pure sculpture’, which he later projected onto drawings for the sake of a more direct sensual experience. He made use of the entire surface of the sheet in order to translate the wonderful linear arabesques into what feels like sculptural monumentality.



Maurice Denis

In 1893, Maurice Denis embarked on a long, fictional journey into the realm of sensations, desires, and secrets in the company of his friend, the Symbolist writer André Gide. Denis illustrated Gide’s Le Voyage d’Urien, describing the inner voyage of an intellectual idler with extremely reduced means. ‘This journey is but a dream of mine,’ wrote Gide, hiding his vision in the first name of his fictitious hero ‘[U]rien’. Resorting to a simplicity bordering on abstraction, Denis translated the story into a new, radically flat visual language of arabesques and curved lines. The figures, water surfaces, groves, gardens, and ships exist side by side, without any hierarchy. 


After 1900, Denis sought to revive religious art, illustrating, among other books, the ‘Fioretti [Little Flowers] of Saint Francis of Assisi’, which contributed to the legends around the saint through a romanticised account of his life.



Catalogue



The catalogue accompanying the exhibition – a homage by artists to Werner Spies – offers a unique approach to the works on view in the form of one hundred statements by the most celebrated and influential contemporary visual artists, poets, filmmakers, musicians, and directors:







Adel Abdessemed   Adonis   Nicolas Aiello   Jean-Michel Alberola   Anita Albus  

Pierre Alechinsky  Eduardo Arroyo   Paul Auster   Georg Baselitz   Valérie Belin  

Christian Boltanski   Luc Bondy   LauraBossi   Fernando Botero   Alfred Brendel   

Daniel Buren   Michel Butor   Sophie Calle   Jean Clair   Tony Cragg  

Thomas Demand   Maryline Desbiolles   Marc Desgrandchamps   Marlene Dumas  

HansMagnus Enzensberger   Philippe Forest   Jean Frémon   Gloria Friedmann  

Jochen Gerner   Laurent Grasso  Mark Grotjahn   Durs Grünbein   Andreas Gursky  

Yannick Haenel   PeterHandke   Michael Haneke   David Hockney   Rebecca Horn  

SiriHustvedt   Anish Kapoor   AlexKatz   William Kentridge  AnselmKiefer  

Konrad Klapheck   AlexanderKlugeKarin Kneffel   Imi Knoebel   Jeff Koons  

Julia Kristeva   Michael Krüger   Jean Le Gac   Peter Lindbergh   Robert Longo  

Rosa Loy   David LynchJonathan Meese   Richard Meier   Annette Messager  

Jean-Michel Meurice  Franois Morellet   HertaMüller   Paul Nizon   PierreNora 

 Richard Peduzzi   ElizabethPeyton   Jaume Plensa

ChristiandePortzamparc   Arnulf Rainer   NeoRauch   Yasmina Reza   DanielRichter  

Gerhard Richter   FrançoisRouan   Thomas Ruff   BoualemSansal   Sean Scully  

Jean-JacquesSempé   Cindy Sherman   Kiki Smith   Philippe Sollers   BothoStrauß  

Hiroshi Sugimoto   Sam Szafran  Gérard Titus-Carmel   Jean-PhilippeToussaint  

Tomi Ungerer   Mario Vargas Llosa   Jacques Villeglé   NikeWagner   Martin Walser 

 Wim Wenders   Erwin Wurm   Yan Pei-Ming






Amedeo Modigliani at Auction

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Christie’s Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale in London on 6 February 2013 

Christie’s Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale in London on 6 February 2013 was led by Jeanne Hébuterne (au chapeau), 1919, one of the acclaimed elegant and lyrical portraits that Amedeo Modigliani (1884-1920) created of his muse and lover (estimate: £16-22 million.




It is a tribute to the quality of Jeanne Hébuterne (au chapeau), 1919, by Amedeo Modigliani (1884-1920) that it was included in the small posthumous retrospective of Modigliani’s works held at the XIII Biennale in Venice in 1922, the first such show to take place in his home country (estimate: £16-22 million, illustrated page one top centre). The portrait is filled with grace and poise, accentuated by the sinuous curve of Jeanne’s neck and the gentle undulation of her body. These qualities point to why some of Modigliani’s pictures from this late phase in his short but dramatic and influential career are referred to as ‘Mannerist.’ Jeanne Hébuterne (au chapeau) is a strikingly modern work of art; an idealised image of the artist’s lover. Modigliani used portraiture as a means to explore an idealised aspect of humanity, an image of internal as well as external likeness. Jeanne serves as the Muse for an insightful and lyrical exploration of the human spirit, created using a subtle blending of colours that radiate a sense of health. Looking at Modigliani’s life and at his work, it becomes apparent that the two were diametrically opposed in terms of atmosphere.

The serene calm of Jeanne Hébuterne (au chapeau) contrasts starkly with the legendary tales of drunkenness and bohemianism with which Modigliani is now so often associated. Perhaps his works provided a balance to his turbulent lifestyle. There is a near-religious sense of grace instilled in this image of his final great love, her hand raised like that of the Madonna. Modigliani created relatively few paintings during his short life – during which he was increasingly accepted as a pioneer in the world of modern art - and, in comparison with those of his counterparts, his works rarely come to the market.

Sotheby’s IMPRESSIONIST & MODERN ART EVENING SALE NEW YORK, 7 MAY 2013




L’Amazone is an early masterpiece by the artist and one of his most arresting images of women (est. $20/30 million). Painted in 1909, it depicts Baroness Marguerite de Hasse de Villers, a glamorous socialite and lover of the younger brother of Modigliani’s patron, Paul Alexandre. Marguerite poses in her riding-habit, gloved-hand on her hip and her arch gaze holding the viewer captivated. L’Amazone’s draughtsmanship and exquisite brushwork announced the arrival of a singular talent that Modigliani would explore during the following decade.  



Sotheby's 2014





LOT SOLD. 2,517,000 USD


Sotheby's 2013





LOT SOLD. 6,481,500 EUR




Sotheby's 2011




LOT SOLD. 3,513,250 GBP



Sotheby's 2010





LOT SOLD. 19,122,500 USD

Sotheby's 2008




Estimate 18,000,00025,000,000 USD

Christie's 2014 






Christie's 2013








 AMEDEO MODIGLIANI (1884-1920)


Christie's 2012





Pr.$2,770,500


Christie's 2011



Pr.$8,146,500

Christie's 2010

Christie's 2009



AMEDEO MODIGLIANI (1884-1920)
2007







 
 
Bonhams 2011



Amedeo Modigliani (1884-1920)

 Portrait de femme 
 Sold for £1,812,000 (US$ 2,763,287)

Bonhams 2012




Jeune fille aux cheveux noirs
Sold for £825,250 (US$ 1,258,500)




Bonhams 2004



Amedeo Modigliani (1884-1920) 
Christina 80 x 69 cm. (31.5 x 27 1/8 in.) 
Sold for £1,546,650 (US$ 2,358,630)




Rubens and His Legacy: Van Dyck to Cézanne

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Centre for Fine Arts, Brussels (BOZAR) 25 September 2014 – 4 January 2015  


Royal Academy of Arts, London 24 January – 10 Apr il 2015 

The Royal Academy of Arts will present the first major exhibition in the UK to examine Rubens’  influence on art history.  Rubens and His Legacy: Van Dyck to Cézanne  is an exploration of the artistic  legacy of Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640), the most influential of Flemish painters.

The exhibition will bring together masterpieces by Rubens and the artists who were inspired by him, during his lifetime  and up until the twentieth century, including Van D yck, Watteau, Turner and Delacroix, as well as  Manet, Cézane, Renoir, Klimt and Picasso.  

Rubens and His Legacy will present over 160 works, comprising paintings, drawings and prints drawn from some of the finest collections world-wide. Each work has been carefully considered for its signific ance to Rubens’ legacy.  

One of the most prolific and sought after artists of his day, Rubens had an international list of patrons that included members of some of the most important royal families in Europe, the aristocracy and the  Church. With an in-depth knowledge of Renaissance art, Rubens combined his studies of the Italian Masters to develop his own style of lively realism and rich brushwork, creating monumental and dynamic paintings. His great versatility and immense capacity to produce work meant that his creative output encompassed every genre of painting: altarpieces, family portraits, landscapes and historical  and mythological scenes.

 While Rubens is most renowned for the depiction of his fleshy, sensuous  “Rubenesque” women, the exhibition will illustrate the breadth of his accomplishment and present a  artist whose visual language, from composition to theme, style and colour, impacted on artists at the  time and has had continued resonance for artists th roughout the centuries following his death.  

Rubens and His Legacy will be presented by six themes encompassing Poetry, Elegance, Power, Lust, Compassion and Violence. Each theme will link the work of Rubens to subsequent generations of great  artists; starting with his assistant Van Dyck to Boucher and Watteau in the 1700s, Delacroix,  Constable, Manet and Daumier in the 1800s, to Cézanne and Picasso 300 years after Rubens’ death.  

Where Poetry is the main theme, landscapes and bucolic scenes by Rubens such as 




The Garden of  Love, c .1633, will be displayed alongside paintings including   




The Harvest Wagon, c .1784 by  Gainsborough,   




Cottage at East Bergholt, c .1833 by Constable and   



The Forest of Bere (Petworth), 1808 by Turner.

A series of portraits will be presented within the theme of Elegance, including  



Marchesa Maria Grimaldi and her Dwarf, c .1607 by Rubens,   




A Genoese Noblewoman and Her Son, c .1626 by Van Dyck and





Young Woman with Dog,c .1769 by Fragonard .

The section on Power will comprise history paintings by Le Brun and Jordaens, including  




 Ruben's Triumph of Frederik Henry, c. 1650-51,as well as works by Latour, Thornhill and Verrio. 



Rubens’ Venus Frigida, 1614, 



Cézanne ’s Three  Bathers, 1875 and 




Picasso’sFaun Uncovering a Sleeping Woman,  1936 will be represented in the  section on Lust , as well as works by Manet, Daumier and Renoir.

A selection of prints and paintings examining religious themes including



Coello’s Virgin and Child Adored by St Louis, King of France,  1665-68,  



 The Conversion of St. Paul,  1675-82 by Murillo and  



 Crucifixion, 1846 by Delacroix will be on  display in the galleries that examine the theme of  Compassion.

The theme of Violence will bring  together tumultuous hunting scenes such as




 The Tiger Hunt,  1616 by Rubens 




and Delacroix’s  The  Lion Hunt,  1858.

Dr Nico Van Hout, curator of the exhibition says, “ It is no coincidence that Delacroix, Vigée-Lebrun, Reynolds and Renoir devoted fascinating discourses, journal entries and letters on the virtuosity and confidence of Rubens’ brushwork, as many artists were trained by seriously studying his altarpieces, allegories, portraits and landscapes. Each artist focused on different aspects of his oeuvre and the works in this exhibition show the great variety of this impact: they include exact copies, creative copies, pastiches and quotations to works that only echo Rubens’ style. Only the best artists were able to translate Rubens’ visual language into a pe rsonal idiom and we are delighted to bring together such a rich selection of works to showcase the ongoing strength of Rubens’ legacy throughout the  past three centuries.”

Biography

Peter Paul Rubens was born in Siegen in Westphalia  (now Germany) in 1577 into a middle-class family. Following his father's death in 1587, the family moved to Antwerp, in the Southern Netherlands ,  where Rubens received an education and artistic tra ining, serving as an apprentice to several  established artists.

In 1600, Rubens traveled to Italy, where he saw paintings by Renaissance Masters  including Raphael, Michelangelo, Titian, Tintoretto , Mantegna and Veronese. Rubens’ patron in Italy was the Duke of Mantua, Vincenzo Gonzaga, who commissioned works and also financially supported  his travels, although Rubens was able to accept works by other patrons.

Rubens returned to Antwerp  in 1608, where he married Isabella Brant and established his own studio with a staff of assistants. His  most famous pupil was the young Anthony Van Dyck, who soon became the leading Flemish portraitist  and collaborated frequently with Rubens.

Soon after his return to Antwerp, Rubens was appointed court painter to Archduke Albert and Archduchess Isabella, who governed the Spanish controlled Southern Netherlands, and he was also considered an ambassador and diplomat. In a time of social and economic recovery after war, Antwerp's affluent merchants were building their private art  collections and churches were refurbished with new  art. As a result, Rubens was able to accept  commissions from whomever he chose.

Following the death of his wife, Isabella, in 1626, Rubens  travelled for several years, combining his artistic career with diplomatic visits to Spain and England on  behalf of the Netherlands. When he returned to Antwerp five years later, he married his second wife, Hélène Fourment, who inspired many of the voluptuous figures of his paintings in the 1630s and  although major works for international patrons still occupied him, Rubens also explored more personal  artistic directions. After a prolific career spanning forty years, Rubens died of heart failure on 30  May1640 and was interred in Saint Jacob's church, Antwerp.    

ORGANISATION  

Rubens and His Legacy: Van Dyck to Cézannehas been organised by the Royal Academy of Arts,  London, the Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp (KMS KA) and BOZAR (Centre for Fine Arts),  Brussels.

The exhibition is curated by Dr Nico Van Hout, Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp and Dr  Arturo Galansino Curator, Royal Academy of Arts, Lo ndon with an advisory committee of advisors  including art historians, Sir Christopher White and Elizabeth McGrath.  



CATALOGUE  


Rubens and His Legacy: Van Dyck to Cézannewill be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue.  Authors include Nico Van Hout, Alexis Merle du Bourg, Gerlinde Gruber, Arturo Galansino, David  Howarth, and Tim Baringer.    

Richard Diebenkorn at the Royal Academy of Arts 14 March –7 June 2015

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In March 2015 the Royal Academy of Arts will presenta survey of Richard Diebenkorn’s figurative and abstract works to a UK audience for the first time in almost twenty-five years. Celebrated as a post-war Master in his native United States, the exhibition will serve as an opportunity to discover the importance of Diebenkorn (1922-1993) within the canon of American painting.

Richard Diebenkorn will be a focused exploration of the artist’s ever-changing, always compelling career across four decades, shifting from the abstract to the figurative in both painting and works on paper. The exhibition will comprise over 50 works with significant loans from public and private collections in the United States and Europe. Diebenkorn created an exceptional and consistently intriguing body of work.

The exhibition will reveal the vital role heplayed in the development of American art, and will be arranged to reflect the three distinct periods of his work. During the early stage of his career in the 1950s he gained recognition as a leading abstract expressionist yet in 1955 he turned his attention to figurative painting, considered at the time as a surprising and unfashionable shift, although he achieved considerable success working in this genre.

In 1967, having relocated to Southern California from the San Fancisco Bay Area, he returnedto abstract paintings and drawings beginning a second long and highly successful period in this style. The exhibition will highlight his staunch artistic independence and will show the ease of movement between styles,which were hallmarks of his career.

The first gallery will explore Diebenkorn’s early abstract work, produced for his Museum of Fine Arts exhibition in Albuquerque, New Mexico and during a teaching post that followed in Urbana, Illionois between 1950 and 1952, as well as the earliest abstract works he produced in Berkeley, California.

The second gallery will focus on works made during his return to figurative and landscape studies in Berkeley, California between 1955 and 1966, when he became known as a successful Bay Area Figurative artist.

The last gallery will display his largest and perhaps most famous body of work, the non-objective Ocean Park series created between 1967 and 1988 in Southern California.

Diebenkorn was strongly associated with California and the American West, where he lived and worked for most of his life. The quintessential colourist, his sumptuous palette and compositions reveal an exquisite sensitivity to his environment and geography, capturing a sense of the light and space of the various locations in which he worked.

For Diebenkorn, each work was a search for  ‘rightness’, an attempt to solve complex and often self-imposed compositional and spatial problems, so that each work becomes a perfectly balanced resolution.

Despite his deserved recognition in the United States, Diebenkorn’s work has been less widely exhibited in Europe. The only major solo exhibition was at the Whitechapel Gallery in 1991 and he was elected an Honorary Academician in 1992, shortly before his death in 1993,a testament to the level of esteem in which he was held by fellow artists.

Richard Diebenkorn will demonstrate the variety and subtlety of the artist’s oeuvre and the ease of his transition from abstraction to figuration and back again, reinvigorating hisposition as a modern American Master.

Organisation

Richard Diebenkorn has been organised by the Royal Academy of Arts, London. It will be guest curated by Sarah C. Bancroft, curator of the exhibition Richard Diebenkorn: The Ocean Park Series (Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Orange County Museum of Art, and Corcoran Gallery of Art, 2011-12), with Edith Devaney, Exhibition Curator at the Royal Academy. T

he exhibition has the full co-operation of the Richard Diebenkorn family and estate (including the artist’s widow Phyllis Diebenkorn), and the Richard Diebenkorn Foundation.

Catalogue

The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with contributions from Sarah C. Bancroft, Edith Devaney and Steven Nash.


Images:

All works by Richard Diebenkorn. © 2014 The Richard Diebenkorn Foundation


Berkeley #5
, 1953. Oil on canvas, 134.6 x 134.6 cm. Private collection. 



Albuquerque #4
, 1951. Oil on canvas, 128.9 x 116.2 cm. Saint Louis Art Museum. Gift of Joseph Pulitzer Jr.


Ocean Park #116
, 1979. Oil and charcoal on canvas, 208.3 x 182.9 cm. Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, museum purchase, gift of Mrs. Paul L. Wattis


Girl On a Terrace
, 1956. Oil on canvas, 179.07 x 166.05 x 2.54 cm. Collection Neuberger Museum of Art. Purchase College, State University of New York. Gift of Roy R. Neuberger


Ocean Park #27
, 1970. Oil on canvas, 254 x 203.2 cm. Brooklyn Museum. Gift of The Roebling Society and Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Blatt and Mr. and Mrs. William K. Jacobs, Jr., 72.4


Cityscape #1
, 1963. Oil on canvas, 153 x 128.3 cm. San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Purchased with funds from Trustees and friends in memory of Hector Escobosa, Brayton Wilbur, and J.D. Zellerbach
 

Alfred Sisley at Auction

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Sotheby’s 4 November 2009 


La Seine à Argenteuil with its tranquil ambiance and focus on the rural, pre-industrial aspects of river life is typical of Alfred Sisley’s finest work (est. $1.5/2 million, £900,000/1.2 million, €1/1.5 million). Painted in 1870 during a stay in Argenteuil with Monet shortly after the Franco-Prussian War, the present canvas belongs to a group of works that documents Sisley’s observations of the town and its riverbanks. While sharing a general affinity with Monet’s work of this period, Sisley’s own particular fixations are evident in the subject matter of these paintings – his compositions place a greater emphasis on the serenity of nature and the subtle harmonies of light and color, unlike those of Monet who often chose to highlight riverside activity or industry as symbols of modernity. 


The commune of Sèvres, located just over six miles southwest of central Paris, was the setting of several of Sisley’s landscapes at the height of his involvement with the Impressionist group. The artist moved to Sèvres in 1877 and spent the next three years painting its landmarks, including its bridges, the station house and the well-known porcelain factory. Vue de Sèvres provides a vivid depiction of the landscape’s topography, particularly in its rendering of the steep roadway that trails off into the background (est. $600/800,000, £350/450,000, €450/550,000). From the verdant green that dominates the composition, it seems likely that Sisley painted this oil in late spring or early summer of 1879. By the end of the year Sisley would turn his artistic attention towards views of Moret-sur-Loing, but his experience in Sèvres was fundamental in shaping his technique for those later landscapes.

Sotheby's 2014



LOT SOLD. 4,869,000



LOT SOLD. 3,749,000




LOT SOLD. 1,082,500 GBP



LOT SOLD. 3,189,000 USD



Los Verkauft 755,000 USD 

LOT SOLD. 1,445,000 USD



 Sotheby's 2012



Stima 1,500,0002,500,000 USD


Alfred Sisley
CHANTIER À SAINT-MAMMÈS
Los Verkauft 755,000 USD

Christie's 2013


   
                        ALFRED SISLEY (1839-1899)
                        ROUTE DE VERSAILLES
                        PR.$1,085,000



Whistler in Paris, London, and Venice: Yale University Art Gallery

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January 30–July 19, 2015

First exhibition at the Gallery dedicated to James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834–1903) focuses on the artist’s exquisite and masterful etchings

Whistler in Paris, London, and Veniceexamines the life and artistic development of James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834–1903), one of the most celebrated artists of the 19th century, through the lens of three of his earliest and most innovative sets of etchings, the so-called French, Thames, and Venice Sets. The sets are representative of three important periods in Whistler’s life: as a student in Paris, absorbing the lessons of his Realist contemporaries and the Old Masters; as an emerging artist in London, forging a name for himself as an etcher; and as a well-known artist and teacher in Venice, trying to recover his reputation and fortune following a devastating bankruptcy. Over 100 objects from the Yale University Art Gallery’s permanent holdings, including etchings of Venice by Mortimer Menpes, one of Whistler’s most devoted pupils, and several lively works by Whistler’s contemporaries Édouard Manet, Francis Seymour Haden, Childe Hassam, and Joseph Pennell, are joined by more than a dozen works from the collection of the Yale Center for British Art, providing further perspective on Whistler’s life and influence.

Exhibition Overview

Born in Lowell, Massachusetts, in 1834, raised in Saint Petersburg, Russia, and educated for three years at the United States Military Academy at West Point, Whistler had a nomadic and cultured upbringing. During these formative years, he realized that he wanted to be an artist and began training in drawing, first at the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts in Russia and later at West Point. He then studied etching at the U.S.Coast Survey in Washington, D.C., before dedicating himself full time to art at age twenty-one and leaving for Paris in 1855. Though he never returned to the country of his birth, Whistler always identified as an American and reveled in his status as an outsider, in both nationality and artistic output.

As Whistler matured as an artist, he began to cast himself as the “mercurial butterfly”—his signature soon resembled a stylized version of the insect—and to create what he dubbed “art for art’s sake.” The works on view showcase this artistic evolution and represent three major periods in Whistler’s life. The first part of the exhibition focuses on his Parisian stay and the influences and artists he encountered there. Among the works is a selection of etchings from the series Twelve Etchings after Nature(1857–58; published 1858), better known as the French Set, Whistler’s first published series and the first art that he aggressively marketed. These etchings reveal his commitment to working directly from nature and his close study of works by Diego Velázquez, Rembrandt van Rijn, and Johannes Vermeer. In Paris, Whistler befriended artists associated with the Realist and Impressionist movements, including Edgar Degas, Henri Fantin-Latour, and Édouard Manet. Works by some of Whistler’s associates are also on view in the exhibition.

In 1859 Whistler moved to London, where he forged a name for himself as an etcher and celebrity of the art world. The foundation of the second part of the exhibition is a complete set of A Series of Sixteen Etchings of Scenes on the Thames and Other Subjects(1859–71; published 1871), commonly called the Thames Set, which established Whistler’s reputation as an etcher par excellence. Its imagery consists almost exclusively of the changing urban waterscapes of the unsavory commercial districts along the Thames River, where Whistler lived and worked during his earliest years in London.

Whistler’s etching sojourn in late 1879 to Venice, where he tried to recover his reputation and fortune following a devastating bankruptcy, is the focus of the third section of the exhibition, which features selections from the First Venice Set and Second Venice Set(1879–80; published 1880 and 1886, respectively). In some of these extraordinary prints, Whistler captured the landscape dematerializing behind shrouds of soft mist tinged by fading twilight, as he had done earlier in a series of oil paintings known as the Nocturnes, one of several abstract terms Whistler adopted to refer to the mood of a painting rather than its subject. While in Venice, he befriended a small group of expatriate artists, whose work is featured alongside Whistler’s in this section of the exhibition.

The French, Thames, and Venice Sets are important milestones in the Etching Revival, which flourished in Britain and abroad during the Victorian era and absorbed Whistler and members of his circle. The final section of the exhibition explores the influence of Whistler’s etchings on his students and contemporaries—including Childe Hassam, John Marin, Mortimer Menpes, and Joseph Pennell—who carried on the etching tradition and delighted in the expressive potential of the medium.

Also on view are two of Whistler’s original copper plates, as well as other materials that illuminate the artist’s mastery of etching and of printing processes and techniques. Whistler often reworked his exquisitely etched plates, varied his application of the inks, and alternated paper types, making every impression a unique work of art.

“It is splendid that the Gallery’s first exhibition of Whistler’s art will not only focus on his three superlative series of etchings, made in Paris, London, and Venice—some from our own collection and others generously lent by the Yale Center for British Art—but will also greatly sharpen and deepen our understanding of the artist by illuminating the very different circumstances under which he made each of these famous sets,” states Suzanne Boorsch, the Robert L. Solley Curator of Prints and Drawings.

Heather Nolin, curator of the exhibition, expands on this: “Most audiences, when they think of Whistler, likely bring to mind the large painted portrait of his beloved mother, Anna. Yet, it was Whistler’s etchings that first made him famous, and they remain central to understanding his genius and enduring legacy,” states Nolin. “Whistler had a keen aesthetic sense, and found beauty in the unlikeliest of places, such as the seedy docklands along the Thames River. Even places already renowned for their beauty, such as the city of Venice, were transformed by Whistler into more breathtakingly sublime versions of themselves. His genius combined natural artistic abilities and an eye for form and composition with technical virtuosity in etching and printing.”





James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Nocturne, from the First Venice Set , 1879–80. Etching and drypoint on wove paper, 8 7/8 x 12 1/2 in. (22.5 x 31.8 cm). Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of Leonard C. Hanna, Jr., Class of 1913 




























James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Black Lion Wharf , from the Thames Set , 1859. Etching on Asian paper, 8 1/8 x 11 3/8 in. (20.6 x 28.9 cm). Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of J. Watson Webb, b.a. 1907, and Electra Havemeyer Webb 







































  
James Abbott McNeill Whistler, The Piazzetta , from the First Venice Set , 1879–80. Etching and drypoint on laid paper, 10 1/16 x 7 1/16 in. (25.5 x 18 cm). Yale University Art Gallery, Everett V. Meeks, b.a. 1901, Fund 













































James Abbott McNeill Whistler, La marchande de moutarde (The Mustard Seller), from the French Set , 1858. Etching on chine collé, 17 x 12 in. (43.2 x 30.5 cm). Yale University Art Gallery, The Walter R. Cal - lender, b.a. 1894, Memorial Collection, Gift of Ivy Lee Callender 


James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Thames Police (Wapping Wharf), from the Thames Set , 1859 (printed 1864). Etching on laid paper, 16 x 10 3/4 in. (40.6 x 27.3 cm). Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of J. Watson Webb b.a. 1907 and Electra Havemeyer Webb 


James Abbott McNeill Whistler, The Unsafe Tenement from the French Set , 1858. Etching on laid paper recycled from an antique book, 8 x 10 1/2 in. (20.3 x 26.7 cm). Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of Robert W. Carle, b.a. 1897 

The Critique of Reason: Romantic Art, 1760–1860: Yale University Art Gallery and the Yale Center for British Art

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March 6–July 26, 2015

In spring 2015, the Yale University Art Gallery and the Yale Center for British Art present their first major joint exhibition, bringing together treasures of the Romantic art movement from their respective collections. The Critique of Reason: Romantic Art, 1760–1860comprises more than 300 paintings, sculptures, medals, watercolors, drawings, prints, and photographs by such iconic artists as William Blake, John Constable, Honoré Daumier, David d’Angers, Eugène Delacroix, Henri Fuseli, Théodore Géricault, Francisco de Goya, John Martin, and J. M. W. Turner that expand the view of Romanticism as a movement opposed to reason and the scientific method. The broad range of works selected challenges the traditional notion of the Romantic artist as a brooding genius given to introversion and fantasy.



Joseph Mallord William Turner, Wreckers—Coast of Northumberland, with a Steam-Boat Assisting a Ship off Shore, 1833–34. Oil on canvas, 35 5/8 x 47 9/16 in. (90.5 x 120.8 cm). Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection 

Exhibition Overview

The exhibition’s eight thematic sections juxtapose arresting works of art that reveal the Romantics to be attentive explorers of their natural and cultural worlds as well as artists deeply engaged with the mysterious and the spiritual. Two sections of the exhibition explore the tension between subjective expression and scientific description in the Romantic era. “Nature: Spectacle and Specimen” showcases works that straddle the line between art and science; these range from spectacular views of Mount Vesuvius to anatomical and botanical studies.



George Stubbs’s A Lion Attacking a Horse (1770), for example, presents an exacting depiction of mammalian anatomy while dramatizing the wildness of its subjects in a highly theatrical composition. “Landscape and the Perceiving Subject”—one of the largest sections in the show—boasts some of the most breathtaking works in Yale’s museum collections. In this section, paintings such as


John Constable, Hadleigh Castle, The Mouth of the Thames—Morning after a Stormy Night, 1829. Oil on canvas, 48 x 64 3/4 in. (121.9 x 164.5 cm). Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection - See more at: http://artgallery.yale.edu/press-release/critique-of-reason#sthash.wQWOgmep.dpuf
 
John Constable, Hadleigh Castle, The Mouth of the Thames—Morning after a Stormy Night, 1829. Oil on canvas, 48 x 64 3/4 in. (121.9 x 164.5 cm). Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection - See more at: http://artgallery.yale.edu/press-release/critique-of-reason#sthash.wQWOgmep.dpuf
Constable’s Hadleigh Castle, The Mouth of the Thames—Morning after a Stormy Night (1829) exemplify how the Romantics used their careful observation of nature, space, light, and weather to evoke mood and meaning.

“Distant Lands, Foreign Peoples” reveals the artist as an explorer, fascinated by remote worlds. The Romantics came of age in an era of colonial expansion, travel, trade, and ethnographic study, which led to both scholarly discourses and popular fantasies concerning non-Western cultures and locales that stimulated the artistic imagination. “The Artist as Social Critic” complicates the notion of the Romantic artist as an isolated dreamer removed from society and politics. Using dissident political imagery, many artists of this period became vociferous social critics, carrying out the Enlightenment mission of free thought and action. Works like



Théodore Géricault, Retour de Russie (Return from Russia), 1818. Lithograph with tint stone, 17 1/2 x 14 1/4 in. (44.5 x 36.2 cm). Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of Charles Y. Lazarus, B.A. 1936

Géricault’s Retour de Russie (Return from Russia; 1818) serve as scathing indictments of war and Imperial ambition.

“Religion after the Age of Reason” illustrates the changing approaches to sacred themes in the Romantic era. Diverse compositions reveal that the Romantic engagement with religion was not a naive reversion to mysticism but rather a means of individualizing biblical themes and religious experience to extend their cultural relevance. Complementing this section is “The Literary Impulse,” which showcases a range of works inspired by literature, from classical mythology to modern poetry.
“Beyond Likeness” focuses on Romantic portraiture, which emphasized the psychological state of the subject, evoking an empathetic relationship between sitter and viewer. Finally, “The Changing Role of the Sketch” features objects that illustrate how technical processes changed in tandem with widening ambitions for art. Favoring direct perception over highly constructed compositions, the Romantic sketch would come to be reflected in a broad range of developments in modern art, from Impressionism to Abstract Expressionism.

In addition to bringing together outstanding works from the Yale Center for British Art and the Yale University Art Gallery, the exhibition features select loans from important private collections and from Yale’s Lewis Walpole Library. The Critique of Reasoncelebrates the richness and range of Romantic art at the University, representing it afresh for a new generation of museumgoers.

Paul Delvaux at Auction

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Sotheby's  SURREALIST ART EVENING SALE 03 FEBRUARY 2015



Paul Delvaux
Le Train Bleu or La Rue Aux Tramways 
 Oil on board 122 by 244cm; 48 by 96in.
Painted in November 1946 Est. £2.5 - 3.5 million

Painted in November 1946, Paul Delvaux’s monumental work Le train bleu, alternatively known as La rue aux tramways, is one of the most important and remarkable paintings from the peak of his career. Although the artist was acquainted with the leading figures of the Surrealist group, including André Breton and Paul Eluard, his form of Surrealism remained unique. Capturing the modernity of the urban landscape juxtaposed with the sensuality of the nude form, this monumental work is an exceptional example of the paintings he was producing at this critical time in his oeuvre. 





Replete with some of the artist's most iconic motifs, Le canapé bleu embodies Delvaux's aesthetic magnificently (est. $3.5/5 million). Luxuriating nudes play out an ambiguous narrative in the
foreground while the background provides an ineffable sense of place. The setting seems to

oscillate between a cinematic stage set, a domestic space and a train station. The train -
an element that appears in many of Delvaux's works - is only hinted at through the tunnel and red light at the upper left corner of the composition. The viewer is left with an eerie
feeling of erotic anticipation and excitement - a sensibility that pervades many of his earlier compositions as well, including  





Les cariatides from 1946, sold by Sotheby’s in May 2011. 

Sotheby's 2015



Paul Delvaux
LOT SOLD. 60,000 GBP
Sotheby's 2014




LOT SOLD. 80,500 GB
 
 Sotheby's 2013
 
 
Estimate 1,000,0001,500,000 GBP
 
 
 
LOT SOLD. 679,650 GBP 
Christie's



Les Mains 
PRICE REALIZED
$6,578,500



Le nu et le mannequin (Le nu au mannequin) 
PRICE REALIZED
£3,401,250



Le vicinal 
PRICE REALIZED
£2,729,250



Ecce homo (La descente de croix) 
PRICE REALIZED
£1,721,250



Jeunes filles à la campagne 
PRICE REALIZED
£1,609,250


Le temple 
PRICE REALIZED
£1,609,250



Le passage à niveau 
PRICE REALIZED
$1,538,500



Le sacrifice d'Iphigénie 
PRICE REALIZED
$1,314,500



Le rendez-vous d'Ephèse 
PRICE REALIZED
£657,250



La veillée 
PRICE REALIZED
£580,000



Faubourg 
PRICE REALIZED
$485,000


Les demoiselles de Tongres 
PRICE REALIZED
£289,250

HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC at Auction

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Sotheby's 2013
 
 

LOT SOLD. 3,413,000 USD

 Christie's 2015




Un petit chat
PRICE REALIZED
£122,500


 Christie's 2014

 



Dans les coulisses: l'acrobate
PRICE REALIZED
€661,500



 Christie's 2013




PR.£541,875($849,118)

 Christie's 2011





Tête de femme
PRICE REALIZED
£163,250






Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901)
Miss May Belfort
Pr.£1,833,250($2,973,532)





HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC (1864-1901)
CHEVAL ATTACHÉ
PR.$386,500


 Christie's 2010



HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC (1864-1901)
La croisée des chemins
PRICE REALIZED
€241,000

 Christie's 2009










Pr.£6,201,250($8,917,398)




La Clownesse assise (Mademoiselle CHA-U-KA-O), from Elles (D 180; W
PRICE REALIZED
$194,500



 Christie's  2008


Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901)
Deux femmes valsant
Pr.£1,945,250($3,824,362)



 Christie's 2007


Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901)
Au bal de l'opéra
Pr.$10,121,000









The Frick Collection - Art Treasures from New York at the Mauritshuis

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5 February – 10 May 2015

The Frick Collection is beautifully situated in the heart of New York, with a view on Central Park. It is a cherished museum, famous for the high quality of its collection. For the first time The Frick Collection is lending a large part of its world-class collection: no fewer than 36 masterpieces can be admired at the Mauritshuis.

The exhibition includes work by artists otherwise not or barely represented in Dutch museum collections, such as Cimabue, Van Eyck, Gainsborough, Constable, and Ingres. 

Jan van Eyck and Workshop (1390/1400-1441), <i>Virgin and Child, with Saints and Donor


Jan van Eyck and Workshop (ca. 1390/1400-1441)
Virgin and Child, with Saint Barbara, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary and Jan Vos, ca. 1441-1443
Oil on panel, 47.3 x 61.3 cm
The Frick Collection, New York; photo: Michael Bodycomb


The Frick Collection - Art Treasures from New York exhibition consists of artworks from the 13th through 19th centuries: paintings, drawings, sculptures, and applied arts. The exhibition thus provides a representative picture of the varied nature of this first-class collection.


Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1780-1867), Comtesse d'Haussonville, 1845
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1780-1867), Comtesse d'Haussonville, 1845 
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1780-1867)
Portrait of the Comtesse d’Haussonville, 1845
Oil on canvas, 131.8 x 92.1 cm
The Frick Collection, New York; photo: Michael Bodycomb 
An undisputed highlight is the enchanting portrait of the Comtesse d'Haussonville by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres - a masterpiece which has become an icon of The Frick Collection. The exhibition shines with other portraits as well, by Frick favourite artists Gainsborough and Reynolds.
Besides portraits, landscapes are also an important genre within The Frick Collection. Jacob van Ruisdaels' monumental Landscape with footbridge from 1652 was restored especially for the exhibition.


John Constable (1776-1837)
The White Horse, 1819
Oil on canvas, 131.4 x 188.3 cm
The Frick Collection, New York; photo: Michael Bodycomb


John Constable's spectacular White horse, a key piece in his oeuvre, is also on view in The Hague.



Hans Memling (ca. 1430-1494)
Portrait of a Man, ca. 1470
Oil on panel, 33.5 x 23 cm
The Frick Collection, New York; photo: Michael Bodycomb 



Pieter Bruegel the Elder (ca. 1525-1569)
The Three Soldiers, 1568
Oil on panel, 20.3 x 17.8 cm
The Frick Collection, New York; photo: Michael Bodycomb 




Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788)
Portrait of Grace Dalrymple Elliott, ca. 1782
Oil on canvas, 76.5 x 63.5 cm
The Frick Collection, New York; photo: Michael Bodycomb




Francisco de Goya y Lucientes (1746-1828)
The Anglers, ca. 1812-1820
Brush and brown wash on paper, 19.7 x 13.5 cm
The Frick Collection, New York; photo: Michael Bodycomb

Paul Gauguin 8 February to 28 June 2015 FONDATION BEYELER Basel Switzerland

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Paul Gauguin 8 February to 28 June 2015


“I am leaving in order to have peace and quiet, to be rid of the influence of civilization. I want only to do simple, very simple art, and to be able to do that, I have to immerse myself in virgin nature, see no one but savages, live their life, with no other thought in mind but to render, the way a child would, the concepts formed in my brain and to do this with the aid of nothing but the primitive means of art, the only means that are good and true.”

Paul Gauguin in conversation with Jules Huret, 1891

Paul Gauguin (born in 1828 in Paris, died in 1903 in Atuona on Hiva Oa, French Polynesia) has gone down in art history as the painter of the South Pacific who created dreamlike pictures of an exotic realm in beautiful, luminous colours.

Among the icons of modern art, his groundbreaking works in pure hues and flat forms revolutionized art and profoundly influenced the artists of the following generation. No artist before Gauguin had so persistently searched for freedom and happiness in his life and art. This is another reason for the enormous popularity, which lasts until today. It was not until the age of 35 that Gauguin abandoned his career as stockbroker and insurance salesman to become a professional painter, turning from bourgeois to bohemian.

Over the course of the following nearly twenty years he produced a rich and diverse oeuvre, which aside from paintings and sculptures included drawings, prints and writings.Based on unique masterpieces from world-renowned museums and private collections, the Fondation Beyeler exhibition focuses on Gauguin's mature period, when he arrived at his inimitable style. 

Beginning with the radical works done in Brittany, the show continues with the famous pictures that emerged in Polynesia – first on Tahiti, and finally on the Marquesas Islands. It is this imagery in particular that illustrates the formal innovations and richness in content of Gauguin's expressive pictorial language. 

While the paintings form the core of the exhibition, the artist's sculptures, influenced by the Maohi culture, hold a special place, major examples being presented in a dialogue with the renowned canvases. The accent lies on Gauguin's innovative treatment of figure and landscape, which inhis hands enter a harmonious interplay.

Dissatisfied with the situation in the Paris art world, Gauguin decided to explore Brittany, which at the time was still largely unspoiled and promised fresh artistic impulses. During his stay in early 1888 in the small town of Pont-Aven he developed an original style that became known as “Synthetism”. This involved brilliant, pure colours, strong contrasts, and clearly outlined forms juxtaposed with one another to produce imagery that emphasized the flat canvas. Unlike the Impressionists, Gauguin's aim was to record not visible reality but a deeper truth that resided beyond appearances. Soon he became the mentor of a group of young artists who went down in history as the “School of Pont-Aven.” In Brittany there emerged idyllic landscapes, groundbreaking sacred imagery, and complex self-portraits that reflected the various roles in which the artist saw himself.

On his search for “the primitive and savage,” Gauguin hoped to infuse his art with fresh life, and so, in 1891, he decided to emigrate to Tahiti. He imagined the island in the South Pacific as an unsullied tropical paradise in which his talents could unfold free of all restraint. Yet soon Gauguin was forced to realize that Tahitian reality did not conform with his ideal at all, because colonialization and Christianization had largely destroyed the original culture. The artist attempted to compensate for this disappointment by depicting the Polynesian landscape and people in terms of dreamlike, exotic beauty, celebrating them in luminous compositions and expressive sculptures, and drawing inspiration from Polynesian art and mythology.

In 1893, Gauguin was forced to leave Tahiti again and return to France for financial and health reasons. Yet Paris did not bring the success he hoped for, so in summer 1895 he decided to give Tahiti a second chance. There emerged further numbers of major paintings reflecting the artist's ideal of an untouched, mysterious realm, in which his style achieved perfection. Yet despairing of his difficult living conditions, poor health, and especially the premature death of his daughter, Aline, Gauguin attempted to take his own life – under the consequences of which he would suffer for years. In the meantime, the art world was beginning to take note of Gauguin's work. In 1900, he was able to sign a contract with the Parisian art dealer Ambroise Vollard that ensured him of a certain income.

Gauguin felt increasingly uncomfortable on Tahiti because it seemed too European to him – and too expensive as well. He also craved fresh impressions. So, in autumn 1901, he moved to the Marquesas Island of Hiva Oa, about 1500 kilometres from Tahiti and supposedly wilder. Despite his failing health, deep disillusionment, and further strokes of fate, his second Polynesian period brought more paintings that celebrated the cultural richness and natural beauty of the region to the point of idealization and achieved a pinnacle of aesthetic perfection.

As previously on Tahiti, in the Marquesas the artist championed the indigenous population. This led to a conflict with the colonial administration that culminated in his being sentenced to a fine and prison term. Yet before he could go to jail, Paul Gauguin died on May 8, 1903, ill, alone, and penniless, on Hiva Oa, where he still lies.

In their combination of luminous beauty and melancholy yearning, Gauguin's pictures remain as alluring and enigmatic as ever. In a fascinating way they tell of a hope in finding a lost paradise on earth, reflecting a dramatic, restless artist's life spent traveling between cultures, compelled by a love of life and despair. Although Gauguin foundered in the gap between utopia and harsh reality, the unprecedented nature of his art and the uncompromising character of his life lent him legendary status.



 Paul Gauguin
 Contes Barbares, 1902 Primitive Tales
Oil on canvas, 131.5 x 90.5 cm
Museum Folkwang, EssenPhotograph © Museum Folkwang, Essen


Paul Gauguin
D’où venons-nous? Que sommes-nous? Où allons-nous?,
1897/98
Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?
Oil on canvas, 139,1 x 374,6 cm
Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Tompkins Collection, Arthur Gordon Tompkins Fund
Foto: © 2015 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston




 Paul Gauguin
 La Vision du sermon, 1888 The Vision of the sermon
Oil on canvas, 72,2 x 91 cm
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh


 Paul Gauguin
 Arearea, 1892 Joyeusetés (I)Joyousness(I)
Oil on canvas, 75 x 94 cm
Musée d’Orsay, Paris, bequest of Monsieur and Madame Lung, 1961Photograph © RMN-Grand Palais (Musée d’Orsay)/Hervé Lewandowski


 Paul Gauguin
 Parau api, 1892 Quelles nouvelles?What’s news?
Oil on canvas, 67 x 91 cm
Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden, Galerie Neue Meister, Dresden Photograph by Jürgen Karpinski


 Paul Gauguin
 Femme à l’éventail, 1888 Woman with a Fan
Oil on canvas, 91.9 x 72.9 cm
Museum Folkwang, EssenPhotograph © Museum Folkwang, Essen



 Paul Gauguin
 Aha oe feii?,  Eh quoi! tu es jalouse? 1892What! Are You Jealous?
Oil on canvas, 66 x 89 cm
The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow Photograph © The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow


 Paul Gauguin
 Autoportrait à la palette, ca. 1893/94 Self-Portrait with Palette
Oil on canvas, 92 x 73 cm
Private collection



Biography

1848 

Eugène Henri Paul Gauguin is born on 7 June in Paris. His father Clovis is a Republican journalist, while his mother Aline Marie is the daughter of the painter André François Chazal and the Socialist writer Flora Tristan, a Spaniard with Peruvian roots. Paul hasan older sister, Marie.1849Louis Napoléon’s coup d’étatcauses the Gauguin family to leave France and to emigrate to Peru. The father, who suffers from heart disease, dies during the sea voyage.

1849–1854

Aline and the two children live with a well-to-do great uncle in Lima.At the start of the civil war in Peru, the family returns to France and stays with an uncle in Orléans.1856–1864Paul is sent to boarding school because his mother has to work to support the family. In 1861 Aline moves to Paris, where she works as a seamstress. Gauguin follows in1862 but returns to Orléans in 1864for his last year of grammar school. 

1865–1867

Gauguin signs up as a trainee officer in the merchant navy and in 1866, by which time he is a second lieutenant, he embarks on a round-the-world journey during which he learns of his mother’s death.

1868–1870

He becomes a sailor in the French navy, doing his military service and traveling right up to the Polar Circle.

1871–1872

Disappointed by his experiences, Gauguin ends his naval career and gets a job at Banque Bertin in Paris, where he works as an investment advisor while simultaneously speculating successfully on the Stock Exchange. He starts painting and drawing in his free time. Gauguin becomes acquainted with Impressionist painting and attends a private art school, the Colarossi Academy. 

1873 

Marries Mette-Sophie Gad, a Danish woman who has been working as a nanny in Paris.

1874

Birth of Emile, the first of the couple’s five children.Aline (*1877), Clovis (*1879), Jean-René (*1881) und Pola (*1883) are born in the years that follow. Gauguin gets to know Camille Pissarro.

1876–1879

A painting by Gauguin is accepted for the Salon d’Automneand he rents a studio in Montparnasse in Paris. He creates his first sculptures.

1879

Degas and Pissarro invite Gauguin to participate in the fourth Impressionist exhibition. He continues to speculate successfully on the Stock Exchange, investing the proceeds in works by, among others, Pissarro, Manet, Cézanne, Renoir, and Monet.

1880–1882

Gauguin, who is by now working in an insurance agency, participates in further Impressionist exhibitions. He spends the summer holidays in Pontoise, where he and Pissarro both paint and where he also meets Cézanne.He sells some works to the Galerie Durand-Ruel for the first time.

1883

Gauguin gives up his job as an insurance agent in order to devote himself completely to painting. The Gauguins’ financial situation deteriorates and their social decline begins.

1884

Gauguin moves to Rouen with his family in order to live more cheaply. The hope that his paintings might sell better there is disappointed and, at Mette’s urging, he and his family move to Copenhagen to live with her parents. Gauguin works unsuccessfully as the representative of a linen company.

1885 

He has his first exhibition in Copenhagen, which closes after a few days. Gauguin quarrels with his parents-in-law and, taking his young son Clovis with him, moves back to Paris, where they are forced to live in poverty.

1886

In search of a new naturalness, Gauguin moves to Brittany where he lives and works in the artists’ colony in Pont-Aven. He creates his first ceramic works during this period. In mid-October he returns to Paris, where he meets Vincent Van Gogh. He starts thinking about a journey to the tropics.

1887

Mette takes Clovis back to Copenhagen. In April Gauguin travels to Panama and Martinique with his friend Charles Laval, doing several paintings and drawings while he is there. In November he returns to Paris.

1888

Gauguin spends most of the year in Pont-Aven, working together with other painters, who acknowledge and admire him as a teacher. He moves away from Impressionism, developing the innovative painting style known as “Synthetism”, whichleads to his first distinctive masterpieces. In the autumn, he joins Van Gogh in Arles in order to work with him there. In December, following their dramatic quarrel, Gauguin goes back to Paris.

1889

In February Gauguin returns to Brittany, where he stays until the end of the year, dividing his time between Pont Aven and Le Pouldu.He creates his first graphic works. In May, during the World Exhibition, he exhibits some of his works in the Café des artsin Paris.

1890

Gauguin prepares to auction his paintings in order to finance his emigration. 

1891

The money earned from auctioning his paintings at the Hôtel Drouot enables him to travel to the South Seas. In March he goes to Copenhagen to say goodbye to his family. After a farewell party with his painter friends, Gauguin leaves Paris at the end of March. In April he sets sail from Marseilles for Tahiti, where he arrives in June. Together with the young Polynesian woman Teha’amana, he lives in modest circumstances in the village of Mataiea. Tahiti does not prove to be the “paradise” Gauguin had yearned for but he nonetheless creates many of his most important paintings and sculptures there.

1892

In the spring Gauguin suffers a heart attack and has to be taken to hospital. He sends several pictures to Europe for exhibitions but his financial situation deteriorates. 

1893

Completely penniless, Gauguin persuades the government to repatriate him free of charge to France, where he arrives in Marseilles in August. A small legacy enables him torent an apartment in Paris. During this period, he creates further important works, not just paintings and sculptures but also woodcuts. His exhibition in Henri Durand-Ruel’s gallery is a failure. Together with Charles Morice, he starts preparing for the publication of his autobiographical story Noa Noa, which appears in 1897 in La Revue blanche. 

1894

Gauguin spends most of the year in Brittany. He breaks an ankle in a fight and has to spend two months in hospital. On returning to Paris, he discovers thathis mistress, a Javanese dancer called Annah, has ransacked his studio, leaving only his pictures.

1895

In February the second auction of his works takes place at the Hôtel Drouot. The sale is a disaster. Disappointed, Gauguin sets sail from Marseillein July on his second journey to Polynesia. He arrives in Tahiti in September and settles on the west coast. He again creates a large number of masterpieces.

1896

Gauguin lives with a young Tahitian woman called Pauʼura. In the summer he has to return to hospital, presumably to undergo treatment for syphilis.

1897

Gauguin’s daughter Aline dies, causing the definitive break with his wife Mette. Following further heart attacks, he suffers from increasingly poor health. Gauguin tries to commit suicide by taking arsenic and is admitted to hospital. He recovers only very slowly from the after-effects.

1898

To earn money, he takes the position of draughtsman in the Land Registry in Papeete. 

1899

Pau’ura gives birth to their son Emile. Gauguin founds a satirical monthly entitled Le Sourireand writes for a newspaper. His support for the cause of the Maori gets himi nto trouble with the colonial authorities and the Church. 

1900

A contract with the Parisian art dealer Ambroise Vollard enables Gauguin to livefrom his art for the first time. 

1901

In search of new inspiration and lower living costs, Gauguin moves in September to the Marquesas island Hiva Oa, around 1,500 km to the east of Tahiti, where he creates his last major works. He builds his hut Maison du jouir and again cohabits with a young woman. Renewed conflict with the colonial authorities follows. He paints only rarely and becomes increasingly addicted to alcohol. 

1902 

Gauguin’s poor health makes him think about moving to Spain. 

1903

In March Gauguin is sentenced to a fine and imprisonment for having libelled the government. On May 8, before starting to serve his sentence, he dies alone in his hut in Atuona. He is buried the next day in the Catholic cemetery in Hiva Oa.

PUBLICATION

PAUL GAUGUIN  Ed. Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/Basel, Raphaël Bou-vier, Martin Schwander, texts by Raphaël Bouvier, Isabelle Cahn, Lukas Gloor, Gloria Groom, Sam Keller, Martin Schwander, Alastair Wright, graphic design by Hans Werner Holzwarth English 230 pp., ca. 145 ills., 28 x 31.6 cm, clothbound € 68.00, $95.00, £55.00 978-3-7757-3959-7 | 

Unprecedented and groundbreaking—the influential art of  Paul Gauguin  A great many willful painters can be assigned to Post-Impressionism who forged their own artistic paths.  Paul Gauguin  (1848–1903), like Vincent van Gogh, is a particularly uncompromising exponent of this current. His quest for an independent ar-tistic stance and an authentic lifestyle took the former stockbroker from Paris to Brittany before deciding to travel to Polynesia. Simplified forms, expressive colors, and marked two-dimensionality characterize his seminal paintings, which are currently among the most coveted in the world. 

The representative publication traces Gauguin’s artistic development based on great masterpieces from the areas of painting and sculpture—from the multifaceted self-portraits and sacred paintings from Gauguin’s period in Brittany, and the idyllic, wistful paintings and archaic, mystical sculptures from Tahiti, to the late works from his last station on the Marquesas Islands. The volume examines Gauguin’s multilayered body of work as well as his influence on modern and contemporary artists.

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