Aurora (L'Aurore) - William Bouguereau e Estúdio
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OST - 123x64
Between 1881
and 1884, following the success of Naissance
de Vénus (1879, Musée d'Orsay, Paris), Bouguereau embarked
upon a series of four panels representing the hours of the day. They
comprise L'aurore, (Dawn, 1881, Birmingham Museum of
Art, Alabama), Le crepuscule (Dusk, 1882, Cuban National
Museum, Havana), La nuit
(Night, 1883, Hillwood Museum, Washington, D.C.), and Le jour (Day, Private collection). These works each celebrate
feminine beauty and represent an exceptional output in a short period of time
by the artist. When viewed together, the purposeful compositional devices and
harmonious color palettes of each individual canvas create an extraordinary
whole.
In L'aurore, a graceful nymph floats
above a pond of water lilies, a symbol of enlightenment that closes with the
setting of the sun, and reaches for the trumpet-like blossom of the calla lily,
which has long served as a symbol of rebirth and resurrection, a particularly
apt choice for this allegory of the new day. L'aurore was
the first in the series to be exhibited at the Paris Salon and its particular
popularity is suggested by the present work, a reduction of the subject, as
well as several finely finished drawings and an etching, the only one the
artist attempted himself (Bartoli, p. 204-5). Allegorical works like L'aurore captured the public's
imagination, with the writer Edouard Thierry eloquently expressing its appeal:
"M. Bouguereau does not conceive art without grace or grace without
decency, and I congratulate him for it.... L'aurore is a nimble figure,
half nude, half enveloped by a veil which plays in the air. She does not
fly, she does not walk, but glides upon the surface of a body of calm water,
still quiet, and without causing any ripples. The water remains like a
mirror, a mirror barely tarnished by a little morning mist, and to the surface
of this mirror rises the reflection of a twin toe coming to caress the
other. As she glides along, the goddess graciously inclines her head
towards an arum flower which she approaches with her lips, and sips the dew
from the white porcelain cone. All this is of very pure taste, and
beautifully drawn" (as quoted in Baschet, p. 62).
Bouguereau's
studio, which included accomplished artists Pierre August Cot, Alfred Henri
Bramtot, and Gustave Doyen, participated extensively in the painting of the
reduced versions of his Salon works
after 1870. However, Bouguereau always maintained rigid control over his
studio, applying the final touches to his works before signing them. In many
cases it is almost impossible to differentiate between those areas of the
canvas painted by Bouguereau and those worked on by his students,
particularly since before adding his signature to any work, the artist would
make any corrections he felt were necessary to make the reduction an accurate
copy of the original. Records indicate that L'aurore (réduction) was acquired
directly from the artist and sold through Goupil's gallery in 1881 as was
the reduction of Le
crepuscule (sold in these rooms in October 23, 1990, lot 63).

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