Aristide Maillol (1861-1944)
PROPERTY FROM THE JOHN C. WHITEHEAD COLLECTION
Aristide Maillol (1861-1944)

Le Printemps

Details
Aristide Maillol (1861-1944)
Le Printemps
signed 'A. Maillol' (on the front of the base); inscribed with foundry mark 'Alexis Rudier. Fondeur. Paris.' (on the back of the base)
bronze with green patina
Height: 67 in. (170.2 cm.)
Conceived in 1911 and cast in the artist's lifetime
Provenance
Galerie Dina Vierny, Paris.
David L. Wolper, New York.
Acquired from the above by Achim Moeller Fine Art on behalf of John C. Whitehead, circa 1987.
Literature
Achim Moeller Fine Art, ed., From Daumier to Matisse: Selections from the John C. Whitehead Collection, exh. cat., Achim Moeller Fine Art, New York, 2002, p. 27 (illustrated in color).
Exhibited
New York, Achim Moeller Fine Art, The Whitehead Collection: Late 19th and 20th Century French Masters: A Collection in Progress, April-May 1997, p. 116, no. 71 (illustrated in color, p. 117).

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Brooke Lampley

Lot Essay

The late Dina Vierny has confirmed the authenticity of this work.

Printemps is one in the ensemble of four life-size female figures Maillol created between 1909 and 1912 for Ivan Morosov, the renowned Russian collector of modern art. Commissioned to adorn the corners of a spacious neoclassical music room in Morosov's Moscow villa, this quartet of magnificently statuesque women consists of Le Printemps–the present sculpture–a lithe, adolescent girl who is an allegory of spring; L'Été, a voluptuous representation of the abundance of summer; Flore, the Roman goddess of vernal blossoming; and Pomone, the goddess of fertility and fruit-bearing trees.
Although commonly known as Les Saisons, implying that Maillol’s figures adhere to the traditional sequence of cyclical yearly change, the sculptures should actually be understood–as Linda K. Kramer has pointed out–in relation to the suite of murals depicting the myth of Cupid and Psyche, as told in the second century story of Apuleius, that Maurice Denis painted for Morosov's concert room in 1906 (Aristide Maillol: Pioneer of Modern Sculpture, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, doctoral dissertation, 2000, pp. 154-159). Denis had recommended to Morosov that Maillol be given this four-figure commission; the sculptor commenced his preparatory work in late 1908. Echoing the mythical transformation of Psyche from a mortal into an immortal being, the four figures, according to Kramer, can be divided into two pairs of women, one of whom is human and mortal (Le Printemps and L’Été), and the other divine and eternal (Flore and Pomone). Each pairing contrasts a real with an idealized feminine presence.
Both Le Printemps and Flore, holding garlands of flowers, represent the youthfulness of spring as the season unfolds in successive stages. Le Printemps, who is nude, has lifted the blossoms to her chest, as if to offer them to the spectator or to adorn herself. She personifies the season in its early, unfolding stage, offering promise of the fullness to come, like a young girl emerging from puberty. Flore, by contrast, is draped in a thin, clinging, full-length gown, and holds her garland across her upper thighs. She is springtime repletely manifest–her mature form embodies the fullness of vernal splendor. The metamorphosis of Psyche is thereby accomplished; the loveliness of the girl in her human form has attained the idealized beauty of immortal divinity, a poetic idea that mirrored, in Maillol’s view, the process by which the artist may transmute the substance of a naturalistic art into the forms and qualities that betoken the classical ideal.
Maillol selected Catalan women from his native town of Banyuls in the French Pyrénées-Orientales, including his fifteen-year-old maid Laura, to serve as his models. The sculptor found in their Mediterranean features and physiques the serene poise and noble bearing he admired in ancient art, the archaic phase of Greek sculpture during the sixth century B.C. especially, which he studied in the Louvre and encountered in its authentic Hellenic surroundings during a revelatory journey through Greece during the spring of 1908. This momentous experience affirmed Maillol's conviction that the Mediterranean culture of ancient Greece was in fact his own rightful artistic inheritance. His advocacy and transmission of this timeless tradition became his gift and legacy to modernism in the 20th century.
“To celebrate the human body, particularly the feminine body, seems to have been Maillol’s only aim,” John Rewald wrote. “He did this in a style from which all grandiloquence is absent, a style almost earthbound and grave. The absence of movement, however, is compensated by a tenderness and charm distinctly his own; and while all agitation is foreign to his art, there is in his work… such quiet grace and warm feeling that they never appear inanimate. He has achieved a peculiar balance between a firmness of forms which appear eternal and a sensitivity of expression–even sensuousness–which seems forever quivering and alive” (Maillol, London, 1939, pp. 6-7).

Fig:
Aristide Maillol, Flore, 1910. Sold, Christie’s, New York, 1 November 2011, lot 72.

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