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Auction archive: Lot number 14W

HENRI LE SIDANER

Estimate
US$300,000 - US$500,000
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 14W

HENRI LE SIDANER

Estimate
US$300,000 - US$500,000
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION, AMERICA HENRI LE SIDANER (1862-1939) Neige signed 'Le Sidaner' (lower left) oil on canvas 59 x 49 in (150 x 125 cm) Painted in 1924 Fußnoten Provenance Galeries Georges Petit, Paris, no. 7690 & 10.427. Emile Prat, Fontanes. Private collection, and sold: Sotheby's, New York, November 17, 1998, lot 287. Acquired at the above sale. Exhibited Paris, Salon des Tuileries, 1924, no. 962. Paris, Galeries Georges Petit, Exposition Le Sidaner, February 1925, no. 4. Literature C. Mauclair, Henri Le Sidaner Paris, 1928 (illustrated p. 139). Y. Farinaux-Le Sidaner, Le Sidaner: l'oeuvre peint et gravé, Paris, 1989, no. 537 (illustrated p. 206). Henri Le Sidaner is renowned for his serene and intimate outdoor still life scenes featuring a deserted table and chairs with hints of the human figures recently removed. Art critic Camille Mauclair wrote of Le Sidaner: "He considered that the silent harmony of things is enough to evoke the presence of those who live among them. Indeed, such presences are felt throughout his works. Deserted they may be but never empty" (C. Mauclair, Henri Le Sidan, Paris, 1928, p. 12). Neige is representative of Le Sidaner's mature style and incorporates elements from the several movements that characterized and influenced the artist's career. The present work embodies the Intimist artistic movement, as defined by Mauclair: "A revelation of the soul through the things painted, the magnetic suggestion of what lies behind them through the description of the outer appearance, the intimate meaning of the spectacles of life. This intimate meaning is not exactly the symbolism or the mysticism of the primitives or of the allegorists of the Renaissance, who combined natural elements from the point of view of personal conception. It confines itself to expressing so much of their depth as objects and beings, as we perceive them, allow us to divine—the daily tragedy and mystery of ordinary existence, and the latent poetry of things" (C. Mauclair, The Great French Painters and the Evolution of French Painting from 1830 to the Present Day, London, 1903, p. 122). The trajectory from Impressionism to Intimism is clear in the latter movement's application of the staccato brushstrokes and focus on play of light, but Intimism abandoned an interest in accuracy of perspective and color in favor of merging figure and ground and an exaggerated color palette. Such compositional structure is evident in the present work, which is a striking example of Le Sidaner's delicate play with optics. Here, amidst the snow fall, three chairs are situated in a conversational circle, with the chairs at far left and furthest in the back tilted slightly to suggest their occupants only just vacated. Le Sidaner's acute understanding of velvety darkness comingling with sparkles of light is stunningly conveyed in his subtly cascading snowflakes during twilight. There is a slight forward tilt to the entire scene, thereby suggesting a confluence between the foreground garden seats with the house glimmering behind. It is with great care that Le Sidaner composed such a still life to convey the palpable, invisible human presence that lends his paintings their intimacy. "These familiar objects supplied in the absence of people make one think that people have just left, and are nearby, or will return to lend the objects an animation that was only temporarily absent" (C. Lévy-Lambert, "L'oeuvre de Henri Le Sidaner" in Henri Le Sidaner (exhibition catalogue), Musée Marmottan, Paris, 1989, p. 31). Le Sidaner's garden at his home in Gerberoy, where this work was painted, provided the artist seemingly endless inspiration. Le Sidaner first visited Gerberoy in March 1901 in search of a proper country home to escape to from Paris. His son Rémy later reflected that his father "longed to plan a garden of his own, in which the landscape would be designed by him personally and in which he could achieve his favorite light effects. He mentioned

Auction archive: Lot number 14W
Auction:
Datum:
12 Nov 2019 - 13 Nov 2019
Auction house:
Bonhams London
New York 580 Madison Avenue New York NY 10022 Tel: +1 212 644 9001 Fax : +1 212 644 9009 info.us@bonhams.com
Beschreibung:

PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION, AMERICA HENRI LE SIDANER (1862-1939) Neige signed 'Le Sidaner' (lower left) oil on canvas 59 x 49 in (150 x 125 cm) Painted in 1924 Fußnoten Provenance Galeries Georges Petit, Paris, no. 7690 & 10.427. Emile Prat, Fontanes. Private collection, and sold: Sotheby's, New York, November 17, 1998, lot 287. Acquired at the above sale. Exhibited Paris, Salon des Tuileries, 1924, no. 962. Paris, Galeries Georges Petit, Exposition Le Sidaner, February 1925, no. 4. Literature C. Mauclair, Henri Le Sidaner Paris, 1928 (illustrated p. 139). Y. Farinaux-Le Sidaner, Le Sidaner: l'oeuvre peint et gravé, Paris, 1989, no. 537 (illustrated p. 206). Henri Le Sidaner is renowned for his serene and intimate outdoor still life scenes featuring a deserted table and chairs with hints of the human figures recently removed. Art critic Camille Mauclair wrote of Le Sidaner: "He considered that the silent harmony of things is enough to evoke the presence of those who live among them. Indeed, such presences are felt throughout his works. Deserted they may be but never empty" (C. Mauclair, Henri Le Sidan, Paris, 1928, p. 12). Neige is representative of Le Sidaner's mature style and incorporates elements from the several movements that characterized and influenced the artist's career. The present work embodies the Intimist artistic movement, as defined by Mauclair: "A revelation of the soul through the things painted, the magnetic suggestion of what lies behind them through the description of the outer appearance, the intimate meaning of the spectacles of life. This intimate meaning is not exactly the symbolism or the mysticism of the primitives or of the allegorists of the Renaissance, who combined natural elements from the point of view of personal conception. It confines itself to expressing so much of their depth as objects and beings, as we perceive them, allow us to divine—the daily tragedy and mystery of ordinary existence, and the latent poetry of things" (C. Mauclair, The Great French Painters and the Evolution of French Painting from 1830 to the Present Day, London, 1903, p. 122). The trajectory from Impressionism to Intimism is clear in the latter movement's application of the staccato brushstrokes and focus on play of light, but Intimism abandoned an interest in accuracy of perspective and color in favor of merging figure and ground and an exaggerated color palette. Such compositional structure is evident in the present work, which is a striking example of Le Sidaner's delicate play with optics. Here, amidst the snow fall, three chairs are situated in a conversational circle, with the chairs at far left and furthest in the back tilted slightly to suggest their occupants only just vacated. Le Sidaner's acute understanding of velvety darkness comingling with sparkles of light is stunningly conveyed in his subtly cascading snowflakes during twilight. There is a slight forward tilt to the entire scene, thereby suggesting a confluence between the foreground garden seats with the house glimmering behind. It is with great care that Le Sidaner composed such a still life to convey the palpable, invisible human presence that lends his paintings their intimacy. "These familiar objects supplied in the absence of people make one think that people have just left, and are nearby, or will return to lend the objects an animation that was only temporarily absent" (C. Lévy-Lambert, "L'oeuvre de Henri Le Sidaner" in Henri Le Sidaner (exhibition catalogue), Musée Marmottan, Paris, 1989, p. 31). Le Sidaner's garden at his home in Gerberoy, where this work was painted, provided the artist seemingly endless inspiration. Le Sidaner first visited Gerberoy in March 1901 in search of a proper country home to escape to from Paris. His son Rémy later reflected that his father "longed to plan a garden of his own, in which the landscape would be designed by him personally and in which he could achieve his favorite light effects. He mentioned

Auction archive: Lot number 14W
Auction:
Datum:
12 Nov 2019 - 13 Nov 2019
Auction house:
Bonhams London
New York 580 Madison Avenue New York NY 10022 Tel: +1 212 644 9001 Fax : +1 212 644 9009 info.us@bonhams.com
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