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sexta-feira, 7 de maio de 2021
Casas e Figura (Houses and Figure) - Vincent van Gogh
Casas e Figura (Houses and Figure) - Vincent van Gogh
Barnes Foundation, Filadélfia, Estados Unidos
OST - 52x40 - 1890
Van Gogh painted this landscape during the last year of his life, when he was a patient at an asylum in Saint-Remy, near Arles, in the South of France. With limited access to the outdoors, Van Gogh had to paint what could be seen out the window—or, as is the case here, what he could picture in his mind. This painting is a remembrance of his native Netherlands, showing the thatched cottages that dotted the Dutch landscape.
O Fumante (The Smoker / Le Fumeur) - Vincent van Gogh
O Fumante (The Smoker / Le Fumeur) - Vincent van Gogh
Barnes Foundation, Filadélfia, Estados Unidos
OST - 62x47 - 1888
During his stay in Arles, a town in the South of France, Van Gogh often painted the local farm workers, whose simple lifestyle he admired and idealized. Van Gogh captures the humble coat of this man in loose, muddy strokes; ruddy cheeks suggest his work outdoors. A few horizontal dashes indicate puffs of smoke, and thick, unblended marks describe an ear. Despite these moments of near abstraction, Van Gogh maintains an astounding attention to naturalistic detail, working to portray to the way a person really looks and behaves. Note how the man's mouth is slightly clenched to hold the pipe.
Natureza Morta (Still Life / Nature Morte) - Vincent van Gogh
Natureza Morta (Still Life / Nature Morte) - Vincent van Gogh
Barnes Foundation, Filadélfia, Estados Unidos
OST - 55x46 - 1888
Van Gogh often called his still lifes "color studies." By arranging flowers in different combinations and setting them against saturated fields of color, he could experiment with bold new chromatic relationships. Van Gogh painted this canvas in May 1888, a few months after he had moved to the village of Arles in the South of France. Several still lifes from his Arles period feature the same objects depicted here—the blue majolica vase with painted decoration and the white teacup.
O Bordel / O Lupanar (The Brothel / Le Lupanar) - Vincent van Gogh
O Bordel / O Lupanar (The Brothel / Le Lupanar) - Vincent van Gogh
Barnes Foundation, Filadélfia, Estados Unidos
OST - 33x41 - 1888
Van Gogh painted this sketch of a brothel parlor while working in close dialogue with fellow artist Paul Gauguin. In the fall of 1888, Van Gogh convinced Gauguin to join him in Arles in the South of France, and the two artists often painted there side by side. They also visited brothels together, partly to find figural subjects for painting. Encouraged by Gauguin, Van Gogh painted this work from memory, capturing the types of people—women in bright dresses drinking with men, soldiers wearing distinctive red hats—encountered in such a setting. He used an underlying blue wash to suggest the lurid atmosphere.
A Fábrica, Asnières-sur-Seine, França (The Factory) - Vincent van Gogh
A Fábrica, Asnières-sur-Seine, França (The Factory) - Vincent van Gogh
Asnières-sur-Seine - França
Barnes Foundation, Filadélfia, Estados Unidos
OST - 46x55 - 1887
In the late nineteenth century, the French landscape was becoming increasingly marked by signs of industry. Van Gogh depicts a glass factory in Asnières, a suburb northwest of Paris where the artist painted frequently in the summer of 1887. The round objects stacked along the sides of the pathway are balls of glass awaiting melting inside the buildings. They would have been formed into lantern globes for gas streetlights and interior fixtures.
OST - 46x55 - 1887
In the late nineteenth century, the French landscape was becoming increasingly marked by signs of industry. Van Gogh depicts a glass factory in Asnières, a suburb northwest of Paris where the artist painted frequently in the summer of 1887. The round objects stacked along the sides of the pathway are balls of glass awaiting melting inside the buildings. They would have been formed into lantern globes for gas streetlights and interior fixtures.
O Carteiro (The Postman) - Vincent van Gogh
O Carteiro (The Postman) - Vincent van Gogh
Barnes Foundation, Filadélfia, Estados Unidos
OST - 65x55 - 1889
For most of 1888, Vincent van Gogh rented a room above the Café de la Gare in Arles [France], near the train station. It was probably there that he met Joseph-Étienne Roulin, a mail handler who became his close friend as well as an important subject for his paintings. Between July 1888 and April 1889, Van Gogh painted six portraits of Roulin (as well as several of Roulin's wife and children). In each, Roulin wears his dark blue uniform, with the word "Postes" clearly legible across his hat. Clothing plays a central role in this series, describing not only the sitter's occupation but also perhaps his political leanings; as an ardent socialist, he would have worn his worker identity proudly. Moreover, the uniform announces that portraiture is no longer reserved for the upper class.
Roulin is shown here from the shoulders up, his body centered and perfectly square to the picture plane. His gaze is steady yet gentle. In contrast to the symmetry of the composition, his features are slightly uneven: the nose is lopsided and the eyes are too, an irregularity that is accentuated by the heavier touches of red around one eyelid. The mustache hangs in uneven clumps over his lips. All these details add to the naturalism of Roulin's face, which is even more striking for the picture's many decorative qualities.
In The Postman, one of the first works to enter Albert Barnes's collection, Van Gogh turns an ordinary salt-and-pepper beard into a brilliant ocean of color. Thick licks of paint—green, black, purple, red—curl around one another, each stroke distinct and unblended; in a few areas the bare canvas can be glimpsed between them.
O Barco Ateliê (Le Bateau-Atelier) - Claude Monet
Barnes Foundation, Filadélfia, Estados Unidos
OST - 72x60 - 1876
The figure in the boat is the artist, Claude Monet, who outfitted this floating studio with all his supplies so that he could paint from the middle of the water. Often Monet would anchor his boat when working. But sometimes he painted as he drifted down the river, creating landscapes that are really more a collection of momentary glimpses rather than a depiction of one specific spot.
Lagoa de Ninféias (Le Bassin aux Nymphéas) - Claude Monet
Lagoa de Ninféias (Le Bassin aux Nymphéas) - Claude Monet
Coleção Privada
OST - 100x200 - 1917-19
The culmination of a lifetime’s study of nature, Monet’s epoque-defining series Nymphéas are among the most celebrated works of the Impressionist era. Painted in 1917-19, Le Bassin aux nymphéas comes from the revolutionary body of late work which propelled the artist toward the realm of abstraction and inspired generations of painters to follow.
Monet’s beloved water gardens at Giverny take pride of place in the present work and served as the inspiration for the iconic series which defined the artist’s last two decades. Begun in the 1890s with his early Japanese Bridge scenes and carried throughout the Grandes Décorations, Monet’s Nymphéas series bears witness to all manner of light and season but more importantly to the unprecedented and intrepid artistic exploration of a singular motif.
In 1883, the artist rented a property in Giverny called Le Presoir. After years of financial insecurity in the pioneering years of Impressionism, the artist had at last achieved resounding success and by 1890 was able to purchase the estate. As a testament to his increased station in life and stature in the arts, he built a two-story studio with high ceilings and sweeping skylights with space on the ground level for the trappings of the leisure class like a darkroom and garage for his motorcars. Years later with the design of his Grandes Décorations in mind, Monet built his ultimate atelier. Constructed in 1915, the vast space reached heights of nearly fifty feet and was flooded with natural light from the sweeping windows and skylights. Inside, Monet utilized a custom pulley system which allowed the artist the utmost control over the amount and quality of light filtering in. For the painter who made his name for his work en plein air, the studio provided a sanctuary for finishing compositions begun out of doors or in inclement weather and sheltered the monumental canvases of his late oeuvre.
The artist’s impressive succession of studios was rivaled only by the sprawling and expertly designed landscape which surrounded the property. In 1893 he began to construct his now-famous water gardens and lily pond, fed by water from a nearby river. An avid gardener for much of his life, Monet cultivated a botanical paradise at Giverny designed around his aesthetic and painterly concerns. Constantly supervised by the artist himself and tended to by an extensive staff, Monet’s gardens provided an endless font of inspiration, allowing the painter to record the changing effects of light and weather from myriad vantage points along his property. During 1901-02, Monet enlarged the pond and replanted the edges with bamboo, rhododendron, and blossoming Japanese apple and cherry trees, all of which feature predominantly throughout his late canvases. Towards the end of his life, he told a visitor to his studio “It took me some time to understand my water lilies. I planted them purely for pleasure; I grew them with no thought of painting them. A landscape takes more than a day to get under your skin. And then, all at once, I had the revelation—how wonderful my pond was—and reached for my palette. I've hardly had any other subject since that moment” (quoted in S. Koja, Claude Monet (exhibition catalogue), Osterreichische Galerie-Belvedere, Vienna, 1996, p. 146).
The pond at the center of Le Bassin aux nymphéas was of particular concern to the Monet. Above all, the artist prized the clarity of the water and required that all stray patches of moss or grasses be removed in order to allow for maximal reflective effects. Elizabeth Murray writes of the artist’s exacting preferences: “The gardener would inspect the water lilies themselves. Any yellow leaves or spent blossoms were removed. If the plants had become dusty from vehicles passing by on the Chemin du Roy, the dirt road nearby, the gardener would take a bucket of water and rinse off the leaves and flowers, ensuring that the true colors and beauty would shine forth” (“Monet as a Garden Artist” in Monet, Late Paintings of Giverny from the Musée Marmottan, New Orleans, 1995, p. 53). Monet routinely had the surface cleaned by his gardeners via a small, flat-bottomed boat—itself reminiscent of the studio-boat he used to paint while drifting along the Seine, memorialized in his early painting.
The term Grandes Décorations refers to Monet’s largest-scale, multi-panelled arrangements on the iconic theme of the Nymphéas. Begun in earnest in 1914, the series was designed to envelop a circular room and create a meditative and immersive experience for the viewer. The ambitious project became something of a personal quest for the artist who saw the series as the pinnacle of his artistic legacy. The massive canvases, typically measuring two meters high by at least four meters wide required the aging artist to work on a scale not attempted since even his earliest Salon-style paintings from the 1860s and demanded physical endurance as well as ample financial reserves.
Among the legions of Monet’s champions and benefactors was Georges Clémenceau, the artist’s long-time friend and the prime minister of France. During a period of wartime rations, a number of influential figures including Clémenceau had helped the artist obtain the requisite supplies for his aspirational undertaking. By the close of the war, Monet felt a great sense of pride in his country and immediately wrote to the prime minister upon hearing of the armistice on November 11, 1918. In a poignant letter congratulating the French leader, Monet stated: “Great and dear friend, I am on the verge of finishing two decorative paintings that I want to sign on the day of Victory and have you offer to the State on my behalf. It’s not much, but it’s the only way I can take part in the Victory. I want the two panels placed in the Musée des Arts Décoratifs and would be happy if you chose them. I admire you and embrace you with all my heart” (quoted in Monet: The Late Years, op. cit. p. 20). In 1927, a year after Monet’s death, the gifted panels were installed in line with his directives at the Musée de l'Orangerie in Paris.
Painted at the same time and directly related to the artist’s monumental Grandes Décorations works were a suite of slightly smaller yet equally impactful works of the same horizontal format. These canvases from 1917-19, including Le Bassin aux nymphéas, retain the awesome power of the grand panels and employ a daring color scheme and bold, expressionistic handling of paint. In the large-scale composition of the present work, Monet achieves a remarked breadth of color which seems to capture reflections in motion. The majestic willow trees which surrounded the pond—and which became the subjects of their own discrete series — here reappear in the upper right. The viewer is brought closer to the water’s surface, observing the scenery as if hovering above the shifting colors in the pond's reflections. At center is a trail of florid pink tufts, just loose enough in their handling to question their source; are these blossoms fallen upon the water’s surface or the mere echo of flowers just out of view? The lively palette of the present work stands out in contrast to the more subdued colors of his earlier water lilies and the handling is decidedly looser and more fluid, with flowers indicated by bold strokes of paint as mere suggestions of form. The vigorous brushwork heightens the sense of motion within the scene as the overlapping strokes of color and wet-on-wet paint application lends a tactility and gradient effect to the painting.
Similar paintings from the same vantage point reveal a flat aqueous expanse, set like a stage for the refracted imagery around it. With the horizon omitted, the delicate interplay of reality and reflection are at times conflated or confounded. As the painter and historian William Seitz wrote, “It is surprising how little ‘aesthetic distance’ separates these images from photographic actuality; yet in their isolation from other things, and because of the mood they elicit, they seem, like pure thought or meditation, abstract” (quoted in Claude Monet: Water Lilies (exhibition catalogue), The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 2009-10, p. 43). Exceptionally brilliant among the related body of work, Le Bassin aux nymphéas is remarkable for its bold, jewel-like facets of color and expressionistic brushwork and foreshadows the increasingly abstract compositions finished in the artist’s final years.
Despite a devoted following of many of his fellow artists, Monet's revolutionary late style did not always appeal to the critics of the era whose appetite for abstraction was tepid at best. Even the artist's friend, critic Arsène Alexandre gently conveyed the apprehension with which many of these late works were received: “The painter tried playing the prodigious virtuoso, seeing what color without form could give materially. It can go no further beyond suggestion itself” (quoted in ibid., p. 73). To that end, many of the late masterpieces from the pinnacle of the artist's career went under-appreciated and unsold in his lifetime. After Monet’s death in 1926, his son and only direct heir Michel was left with more than 500 works, including nearly 200 late paintings by the artist. Over the ensuing decades, Michel sold off the works from his father’s studio, often to dealers like Bernheim-Jeune, Paul Rosenberg and Wildenstein & Co., though few records documented such transactions.
While the market was not quite ripe for such grand and experimental canvases in Monet’s day, by the late 1940s a renewed appreciation for the late master was brewing. Public reception of these works began to change with the first published history on the Impressionists by the Museum of Modern Art as well as the 1949 Kunsthalle Basel exhibition. Not only did the show result in the first acquisition of a Nymphéas painting by an American collector, the renowned Walter P. Chrysler, but it also ushered in a wave of Swiss interest in the large scale works, leading to further exhibitions where younger artists like Ellsworth Kelly would first experience them. Awed by the scale, primacy of color and bold handling of the paint, Abstract Expressionists became the natural heirs to Monet's legacy in painting.
One need only to look to the Rothko Chapel to find the same meditative quality afforded by the Grand Décorations installations, while up close, Monet's directional brushstrokes speak to an entirely different genre of action painters like Jackson Pollock, whose drip paintings echo the layered pigments and dynamic effects of Monet’s late work. Monumental works of Joan Mitchell like City Landscape reflect the coloration and bold expressive lines first essayed in Monet’s early twentieth century canvases, while works by Sam Francis and Gerhard Richter speak to the continuity and progression of the artistic tradition advanced by Monet. As Richter stated, “I see myself as the heir to an enormous, great, rich culture of paintings, and of art in general, which we have lost, but which nevertheless obligates us” (quoted in Monet et l’abstraction, Paris, 2010, p. 28).
An exquisite example of Monet’s most iconic series, Le Bassin aux nymphéas stands as the quintessential embodiment of his revolutionary late oeuvre. The monumental canvas featured prominently in the critically acclaimed Monet: The Late Years exhibition at the Kimbell Art Museum in 2019 and remained on loan the collection thereafter. With provenance dating back to Monet’s son Michel and later held in the collection of legendary film producer Ray Stark, the present work comes to the market for the first time in nearly twenty years.
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