Showing posts with label Henri Matisse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henri Matisse. Show all posts

Friday, 5 November 2010

newsfromchristies201011

Henri MATISSE (1869-1954)
Nu de dos, 4 état (Back IV), conceived circa 1930 and cast in 1978
Signed with initials 'HM' and numbered '00/10' (lower right)
Bronze with dark brown patina, 189.2cm (Height)

Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium US$48,802,500 (£30,257,550) (€34,649,775) (Christie's NY, November 2rd 2010, Lot 65)
Estimate US$25,000,000-35,000,000
Lot Sold Gagosian Gallery Inc.


***WORLD AUCTION RECORD FOR THE ARTIST***

Nu assis sur un divan (La Belle Romaine) exemplifies Modigliani's conquest of the nude, a subject that is considered his greatest accomplishment in painting. Continuing the tradition of Botticelli's Venus, Velazquez's Rokeby Venus, Ingres' Baigneuse turque and Manet's Olympia, it ranks among the definitive nudes in the history of Western art.

The four life-sized reliefs known today as Backs I-IV represent Matisse's most monumental and ambitious sculptural undertaking and the longest-lived single project of his career (figs. 1-4). This imposing set of reliefs, executed at widely spaced intervals between 1908 and 1931, has been lauded as "one of the artist's most distinctive achievements" (M. Mezzatesta, Henri Matisse, Sculptor/Painter, exh. cat., Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, 1984, p. 79) and "one of the great landmarks of modern sculpture" (S. Nash, exh. cat., 2007, p. 9). The four Backs are united by the penetrating analysis of a single motif, the female nude leaning against a wall and viewed from behind. The compositions move from a relatively naturalistic rendering of the figure in Back I through progressively simplified and increasingly geometric anatomies to the startlingly stripped down, columnar figure in Back IV--"a stark but refined, highly architectural monolith, in which Matisse smoothed away the struggles of its earlier states" (S. D'Alessandro and J. Elderfield, exh. cat., op. cit., p. 355). The present work is one of twelve bronze casts of this culminating relief, and one of only two examples that currently remain in private hands (...) Back IV with the reprise of the Danse theme that Matisse painted for Albert Barnes (Barnes Foundation, Merion, Pennsylvania). [...]

Property from a European Private Collector

Juan GRIS (1887-1927)
Violon et guitare, painted in Céret, September 1913
Signed, inscribed and date 'Juan Gris, Céret. 9-13' (on the reverse)
Oil on canvas, 100.3x65.4cm

Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium US$28,642,500 (£17,758,350) (€20,336,175) (Christie's NY, November 2rd 2010, Lot 23)
Estimate US$18,000,000-25,000,000
Lot Sold. European Private


***WORLD AUCTION RECORD FOR THE ARTIST***

When Juan Gris returned to Paris in early November 1913 from his three-month sojourn in Céret, he had good reason to be pleased with the pictures he had painted there. He completed thirteen canvases in a consistently focused and formally cohesive series of still-lifes, figures and landscapes, paintings which constituted the most assured, fully fledged and distinctively personal work he had done to date. John Golding has declared, "Gris, who had always been an original painter, had during 1912 asserted himself as an important influence on the minor figures of the Cubist movement. Now, in 1913, he was executing works which match the contemporary paintings of Picasso and Braque in quality and invention... Gris' work of 1913 shows rather a steady progression toward an increasingly accomplished and commanding kind of painting" (op. cit., p. 129). Indeed, among these pictures are several that would eventually be counted among the very best he ever painted, indisputable masterworks that demonstrate an astonishing and dazzling synthesis of idea, color and form. Violon et guitare was Gris' own favorite among these Céret paintings, as he mentioned in a letter quoted below. This painting has since come to be widely regarded as a peak in his magnificent oeuvre, and one of the milestones of cubism and early modernism. [...]

Property from a Distinguished Private Collection: Four Modern Masterpieces

Joan MIRÓ (1893-1983)
L'Air, 1938
Signed 'Miró' (center left)
Oil on canvas, 54.9x46cm

Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium US$10,330,500 (£6,404,910) (€7,334,655) (Christie's NY, November 2rd 2010, Lot 25)
Estimate US$12,000,000-18,000,000
Lot Sold. European Trade


Composed of interpenetrating sections of blue sky and yellow mountains, L'Air is Miró's evocation of his native Spain, as well as Catalunya, the region in which he was born, raised and maintained his ancestral family home. The bright red aspect seen in the various personages and objects that inhabit this landscape join with the yellow earth to make up the traditional heraldic colors which compose the flags of both Spain and Catalunya. Deep blue, bright red, and vivid yellow--these primary colors raise their voices in celebration, as whimsical beings and odd objects float and tumble about. The artist's title suggests the joyous freedom of flight, a miraculous buoyancy that has lifted these creatures far above the events and cares of the world below. There is, however, an ominious subtext that informs these strange occurences. The time is 1938; Miró painted L'Air under the widening specter of civil war in Spain. Ranging across the yellow landscape is a slithering red serpent, whose mustachioed visage is perhaps a caricature of General Francisco Franco, El Caudillo, the leader of the fascist uprising that has torn Spain apart. [...]

Property from a Distinguished Private Collection: Four Modern Masterpieces

Thursday, 4 November 2010

newsfromsothebys201011

Amedeo MODIGLIANI (1884-1920)
Nu assis sur un divan (La Belle Romaine), 1917
Signed Modigliani (lower right)
Oil on canvas, 100x65cm

Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium US$68,962,500 (£42,961,936) (€49,105,649) (Sotheby's NY, November 2st 2010, Lot 7)
Estimate Upon Request (In excess of US$40 million)
Lot Sold. Anonymous


***RECORD FOR THE ARTIST AT AUCTION***

Nu assis sur un divan (La Belle Romaine) exemplifies Modigliani's conquest of the nude, a subject that is considered his greatest accomplishment in painting. Continuing the tradition of Botticelli's Venus, Velazquez's Rokeby Venus, Ingres' Baigneuse turque and Manet's Olympia, it ranks among the definitive nudes in the history of Western art.

Few pictures explore the pleasures of the flesh with such candor, intimacy and immediate appeal. Modigliani believed that "to paint a woman is to possess her."Indeed, her availability to engage with us is undeniable, with her rosy thigh projecting into the foreground. The tilt of her head, piled with lustrous black hair, the strained exposure of the neck, the arch of her brow and the glint in her eyes all accentuate the full complicitness of this woman in the art of seduction. Captivating the imagination with her sensual appeal, La Belle Romaine is nothing less than a goddess of the modern era. [...]

Property from a Private European Collection (acquired at Sotheby's, New York, November 11, 1999, Lot 125, from a Private Collection, Asia)
Lot Sold. Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium US$16,777,500 (Estimate US$12,000,000-16,000,000)


Claude MONET (1840-1926)
Le Bassin aux Nymphéas, 1917-19
Stamped with the signature twice on the reverse
Oil on canvas, 97.5x198.4cm

Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium US$24,722.500 (£15,401,508) (€17,603,979) (Sotheby's NY, November 2st 2010, Lot 13)
Estimate US$20,000,000-30,000,000
Lot Sold Private American Collector


The water lily pond was the defining motif of the last two-and-a-half decades of Monet's life. How this beautiful and visually dynamic subject came to be the focus of Monet's artistic output can be traced back to 1883, when the artist moved to Giverny, where he rented a house with a large garden. Thanks to his ever-increasing financial success, he was able to buy the property outright in the early 1890s and eventually purchased a large adjacent plot of land. It was here in 1893 that he began to construct his famous water gardens and lily pond, fed by water from a nearby river. During 1901-02, Monet enlarged the pond, replanted the edges with bamboo, rhododendron, Japanese apple and cherry trees. 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" (as cited in Stephan Koja, Claude Monet, Österreichische Galerie-Belvedere, Vienna, 1996, p. 146). [...]

Property sold to benefit Yougarts, the core program of the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts (acquired at Sotheby's, New York, November 16, 1998, Lot 10, from The Reader's Digest Collection, Pleasantville, New York)
Lot Sold. Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium US$9,902.500 (Estimate US$9,000,000-12,000,000)


Henri MATISSE (1869-1954)
Danseuse dans le fauteuil, sol en damier, August 16th-20th, 1942
Signed H. Matisse (lower left)
Oil on canvas, 46x55cm

Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium US$20,802.500 (£12,959,444) (€14,812,692) (Sotheby's NY, November 2st 2010, Lot 24)
Estimate US$12,000,000-18,000,000
Lot Sold Anonymous


Danseuse dans le fauteuil, sol en damier brilliantly exemplifies what Matisse called "the colour of ideas." This visually arresting canvas marked the begining of a revolutionary campaign in Matisse's art in the fall of 1942, when he would eliminate extraneous details that characterized his depictions of Odalisqes in the 1920s. Instead, he turned his focus more exclusively towards the essential components of form and color. The present work encapsulates this new direction of his art, with its sharp tonal color contrasts and confident, linear clarity. "I will now begin to paint with the same ardour as I have drawn," Matisse proclaimed in 1942, and surely this canvas has much of the same vigour and spontaneity of his drawings (quoted in Matisse, A Second Life (exhibition catalogue), Musée Luxembourg, 2005, p. 108). Matisse's highly stylized portrayal of the sensuous model ensconced in a plush armchair makes no attempt at anatomical naturalism, prefacing the linear simplicity of the colorful cut-outs that would dominate his art in years to come. [...]

Property from a Private European Collection (acquired at Sotheby's, London, June 19, 2007, Lot 15)
Lot Sold Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium £10,996,000 (Estimate £8,000,000-12,000,000)