Georges Braque (1882-1963)
Property from the Estate of Dr. George S. Heyer, Jr.
Georges Braque (1882-1963)

Carafe, raisin, citron

Details
Georges Braque (1882-1963)
Carafe, raisin, citron
signed 'G Braque' (lower right)
oil on canvas
12 ¼ x 25 5/8 in. (31.1 x 65.1 cm.)
Painted in 1924
Provenance
Dr. Gottlieb Friedrich Reber, Lausanne (by 1927).
A.E. Van Saher, New York.
Dalzell Hatfield Galleries, Los Angeles.
Norton Simon, Los Angeles; sale, Sotheby Parke Bernet, Inc., New York, 2 May 1973, lot 10.
Waddington Galleries, Ltd., London.
Galerie Rosengart, Lucerne (acquired from the above, 1974).
Dr. Bernhard Sprengel, Hanover (acquired from the above, 1975).
Anon. sale, Sotheby Parke Bernet & Co., London, 1 April 1981, lot 59.
Acquired by the late owner, circa 1985.
Literature
"Les expositions: Art européen d'aujourd'hui," Cahiers d'Art, vol. II, no. 6, 1927, p. 7 (illustrated in situ).
G. Isarlov, Georges Braque, Paris, 1932, p. 24, no. 340.
Galerie Maeght, ed., Catalogue de l'oeuvre de Georges Braque, Peintures, 1924-1927, Paris, 1968 (illustrated, pl. 23).
P. Descargues and M. Carrà, Tout l'oeuvre peint de Braque, 1908-1929, Paris, 1973, p. 97, no. 246 (illustrated).
Exhibited
Frankfurt, Kunstverein, 1927.
Hamburg, Kunsthalle, Europäische Kunst und Gegenwar: Zentenarausstellung des Kunstvereins Hamburg, summer 1927.
Houston, The Museum of Fine Arts, The Private Eye: Selected Works from Collections of Friends of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, June-August 1989, p. 107.
San Antonio Museum of Art, Five Hundred Years of French Art, April-August 1995, p. 75.

Lot Essay

Having recovered from a head wound he had received during the fighting at Carency during the First World War, Braque resumed painting in 1917, and during the early 1920s he achieved well-deserved if belated success. He sold all eighteen of the major paintings that he exhibited at the 1922 Salon d'Automne. Paul Rosenberg, who had done much to further Pablo Picasso's fortunes in the years following the First World War, became Braque's dealer as well, and gave the artist an important show in May 1924. As it had been during his cubist years, the painter's primary theme was the still-life. Braque said, "I was painting from nature. That is even what pointed me in the direction of still-life. Here I found an element that was more objective than landscape. The discovery of the tactile space that set my arm in motion when I was confronted with a landscape was beckoning me to seek an even closer sensual contact. If a still-life is no longer within my grasp, it seems to me that it ceases to be a still-life or to move me" (quoted in Georges Braque, Order and Emotion, exh. cat., Museum of Contemporary Art, Andros, 2003, p. 20). He chose the most ordinary, everyday objects; he had no interest in the sleekly designed consumer goods that fascinated Fernand Léger. Edwin Mullins has written: "The mid-1920s were rich in small still-lifes. These cabinet-paintings, which manage to combine so effortlessly the French nature morte tradition with a new pictorial language developed from Cubism, are in some respects the very quintessence of Braque. Small in scale, humble in theme, exuding an unaffected relish for the pleasures of plain bourgeois living they are the purest examples of Braque the craftsman, and of Braque the lover of things simple and everyday. They are also Braque's point of closest contact with that earlier master of intimate still-life, Chardin, and through him the Dutch seventeenth-century still-lifes that were so popular with the French in Chardin's day, and about which the term 'cabinet-pictures' was first used" (Braque, London, 1968, pp. 108-109).
Braque described his new pictorial goal as exploring "how far one can go in blending volume and color" (quoted in J. Leymarie, Georges Braque, exh. cat., The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, 1988, p. 27). The present painting shows areas of the dark ground that Braque favored using in his still-lifes from 1918 into the late 1920s, but contrasted with a bright yellow in the center. The still-life elements have been rendered as flattened shapes that act as simple signs for the objects they represent, as in cubist practice. Braque has created spatial depth by contrasting the stark white tablecloth, which offsets the tableau of fruit and bottle on the table, with the darker foreground and background areas. The interplay of colors and forms between the still life elements captures the eye immediately. Braque employed a rectangular format here, allowing him to disperse the focal points in the center of the composition, resulting in a sense of casual intimacy and relaxed pliancy, notable for works of this period. Isabelle Monod-Fontaine has written: "nobody else succeeded as he did in transforming a table covered with objects into a mental space, a cerebral as well as a visual stimulus" (exh. cat., op. cit., 2003, p. 19).

More from Impressionist and Modern Art Day Sale

View All
View All