app download
ArtFox APP
Home > Auction >  Impressionist and Modern Art >  Lot.30 Arbres au Jas de Bouffan Paul Cézanne(1839-1906)

LOT 30 Arbres au Jas de Bouffan Paul Cézanne(1839-1906)

Starting price
GBP100,000
Estimate  GBP  100,000 ~ 150,000

Viewed  187  Frequency

Pre-bid 0  Frequency

Log in to view

logo Collect

邦瀚斯

Impressionist and Modern Art

邦瀚斯

Name

Size

Description

Translation provided by Youdao

Translate
Size

Description

PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED PARISIAN COLLECTION






Paul Cézanne (1839-1906)


Arbres au Jas de Bouffan pencil on paper32 x 49.2cm (12 5/8 x 19 3/8in).Executed circa 1892 - 1895
|This work will be included in the forthcoming online catalogue raisonné of Paul Cézanne's works on paper, under the direction of Walter Feichenfeldt, David Nash and Jayne Warman.ProvenanceGalerie Alfred Flechtheim, Berlin (1927).Professor Hans Purmann Collection, Zurich (acquired from the above).Heidi Voellmoeller Collection, Zurich (a gift from the above by 1956).Private collection, New York; their sale, Christie's, Paris, 31 March 2016, lot 64.Acquired at the above sale by the present owner.ExhibitedBerlin, Galerie Alfred Flechtheim, Cézanne, Acquarelle und Zeichnungen; Bronzen von Edgar Degas, 19 May - 16 June 1927, no. 44 (titled 'Bäume').The Hague, Gemeentemuseum, Paul Cézanne, June – July 1956, no. 105 (later travelled to Zurich & Munich; nos. 162 & 123).Tokyo, National Museum of Western Art, Cézanne, 30 March – 19 May 1974, no. 124 (later travelled to Kyoto & Fukuoka; titled 'Arbres').Tubingen, Kunsthalle, Paul Cézanne, Das zeichnerische Werk, 21 October - 31 December 1978, no. 105 (titled 'Baumlandschaft').Martigny, Fondation Pierre Gianadda, Cézanne, le chant de la terre, 16 June - 19 November 2017, no. 38.LiteratureA. Chappuis, The Drawings of Paul Cézanne, a Catalogue Raisonné, Vol. I, London, 1973, no. 1163 (illustrated Vol. II).'I am deeply touched by the letter you were so kind as to write me. Nothing could be more agreeable to me than to know that, in the depths of your solitude, you are aware of the commotion that's been made over Homage to Cézanne. Perhaps you will now have some idea of the place you occupy in the painting of our time, of the admiration you inspire, and of the enlightened enthusiasm of a few young people, myself included, who can rightly call themselves your students, because it is to you they are indebted for whatever they have understood about painting; and we will never be able to thank you enough for it.' – (Maurice Denis in a letter to Paul Cézanne, 13 June 1901, quoted in J. Watkins (ed.), Cézanne, Philadelphia, 1996, p. 35)Depicting an inexact location on his family's estate of Jas de Bouffan, the meticulous draughtsmanship that forms the interlocking branches and tree trunks that frame the image, render the present work instantly recognisable as by the hand of Paul Cézanne. These iconic motifs that represent his home in southern France can be seen throughout the artist's oeuvre and in the work of many artists that followed in his wake, as Maurice Denis states in his touching letter to Cézanne.As was often the case for artists of his time, after leaving the Free Municipal School of Drawing in Aix, Cézanne sought inspiration in Paris. He spent his time visiting the Louvre and teaching himself from the Masters within its walls, copying the works of Titian, Rubens and Michelangelo, a link most evident in his early paintings. In addition to engrossing himself in the Masters of the past, his drawing lessons at the Académie Suisse introduced him to some of the titans that are admired so greatly today; the likes of Camille Pissarro, Claude Monet and Pierre-Auguste Renoir. During this period, he often imitated Gustave Courbet's use of the palette knife to apply his paint and Edouard Manet's sensitive touches of black and white, his concentration and commitment to spontaneity becomes paramount.Perhaps most importantly, it is here in the mid-1860s that he begins his close relationship with Pissarro. It was a companionship that initially formed as that of the tutor and pupil, with Pissarro asserting a hugely beneficial influence over the impressionable younger artist. He learned to subdue his aggressive structuring and appreciate the philosophy and technique of Impressionism. Their frequent country excursions to paint accelerated Cézanne's ability and in the years 1877 to 1888 we can see his adaptation and modification of the Impressionist style, a change that Patrick T. Malone of the Art Institute of Chicago identified, perhaps unintentionally fittingly, in Cézanne's work The Turn in the Road (c.1881, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston). The use of a stronger framework of lines, the bold trunks of the trees and extended strokes that create a three-dimensional landscape are all key components of Cézanne's style, all of which can be identified, arguably in a more mature and refined fashion in the present work, roughly a decade later. Like so many artists, particularly in this era, Cézanne sought light, air and landscape, which resulted in his leaving the city and moving to the countryside, if not solely for his artistic endeavours, then perhaps due to his fluctuating temperament and provincial origins. He wanted total seclusion, a seclusion he found in the pastoral idyll at Jas de Bouffan.This Southern French sanctuary offered the solitary artist a host of motifs, and whilst he often painted the local inhabitants and workers, in the majority of his later period he painted landscapes almost exclusively. Arguably it is in these assertive landscapes that his mastery of draughtsmanship is at its height. He often returned to the same locations, most notably to the rows of trees on his family estate as well as the sprawling view towards Mont Sainte-Victoire from the plateau above his studio, a view that could perhaps be considered his defining composition. From his rural upbringing, it is no surprise that nature was a vital component of Cézanne's life and consequently had a profound impact on his work. In a 1904 letter to Louis Aurenche, he wrote: 'a strong feeling for nature – and certainly mine is very keen – is the necessary basis of every artistic conception.' (Paul Cézanne quoted in J. Watkins (ed.), op. cit., p. 17).The present work is filled with the classic components of Cézanne's artistic method. The bold forms of the tree trunks, sculpted by thick pencil strokes, frame the work with the upper branches extending across to meet one another in an arboreal embrace. This natural gateway entices the viewer into the scene, curious to move forward and discover what resides in the softer, less sketched background. His exploratory horizontal and vertical lines create breadth and depth in the image and the modulation of the canopy and upper limbs of the trees creates the shimmering, swaying motion of a breezy, bucolic afternoon in Southern France. We can clearly see the spontaneous nature of the artist that had developed during his time in Paris, in addition to the three-dimensional pictorial assembly so evident in The Turn in the Road. He had a strong emphasis on the geometric construction of natural form and a technical mastery of its execution which brought him ever closer to abstraction and the Cubist movement, subsequently changing the course of art.The simplicity of the present work, and indeed many of Cézanne's drawings, is testament to his ability as an artist. As Joseph Rishel so aptly comments: 'as so often with Cézanne's pencil drawings, one tends, when looking at this sheet, to forget that it is not in colour' (J. Rishel, 'The 1880s', in J. Watkins (ed.), op. cit., p. 250). It is through his simplistic structuring of the scene with only the most necessary of lines that we are transported into the moment and offered an intimate glimpse into the daily rhythms of one of Modern Art's most important figures.

Preview:

2018.10.10

Address:

伦敦骑士桥

Start time:

  • Commission  GBP
  • 0 ~ Unlimitation25.0%

Online payment is available,

You will be qualified after paid the deposit!

Online payment is available for this session.

Bidding for buyers is available,

please call us for further information. Our hot line is400-010-3636 !

This session is a live auction,

available for online bidding and reserved bidding

×
This session requires a deposit. Please leave your contact. Our staff will contact you. Or you can call400-010-3636 (Mainland China)+86 010-5994 2750 (Overseas) Contact Art Fox Live Customer Service
Contact:
Other Lots in this session 66unit
Barques à Collioure HENRI MARTIN(1860-1943)

LOT 1

La fleur qui marche 56.5cm high. (22 1/4in high.) Conceived in 1952 and executed in an edition of 8 by Les Ateliers Brice After FERNAND LÉGER

LOT 10

Sans titre. Projet pour 'Ubu Roi' Joan Miró(1893-1983)

LOT 11

Sans titre. Projet pour 'Ubu Roi' Joan Miró(1893-1983)

LOT 12

Sans titre. Projet pour 'Ubu Roi' Joan Miró(1893-1983)

LOT 13

Nu au croissant de lune Executed circa 1950 MARC CHAGALL(1887-1985)

LOT 14

Les amoureux à l'âne bleu MARC CHAGALL(1887-1985)

LOT 15

Scène de cirque MARC CHAGALL(1887-1985)

LOT 16

Paysage de Paris, place du Tertre LÉONARD TSUGUHARU FOUJITA(1886-1968)

LOT 17

La fête d'anniversaire 76.5 x 101.7cm (30 1/8 x 40 1/16in); 91.6 x 116.5cm (36 1/16 x 45 7/8in) (with the artist's frame) LÉONARD TSUGUHARU FOUJITA(1886-1968)

LOT 18

Etude pour Claquemur Hans Bellmer(1902-1975)

LOT 19

L'église de Labastide du Vert HENRI MARTIN(1860-1943)

LOT 2

Figures à l'antique Paul Delvaux(1897-1994)

LOT 20

Sans titre (recto); Sans titre (verso) Toyen(Maria Cerminova) (1902-1980)

LOT 21

Untitled Man Ray(1890-1976)

LOT 22

Reconstruction de l'être aimé II VICTOR BRAUNER(1903-1966)

LOT 23

Art Fox Live
Buyers
Auctioneers
Follow Us
Feedback

在线客服

咨询热线

400-010-3636

微信公众号

APP下载

顶部

Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the current bidding is ended.
Hint
宝物的份数已经被购完,下次下手请及时。
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not able to bid now when the bid is started or ended.