Raoul Dufy (1877-1953)
Property from the Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Sold to Benefit the Acquisitions Fund:Selections from the Charlotte Bergman Collection
Raoul Dufy (1877-1953)

Le concerto au violon

Details
Raoul Dufy (1877-1953)
Le concerto au violon
signed 'Raoul Dufy' (lower center)
oil on masonite
16 x 20 in. (40.7 x 50.9 cm.)
Painted in 1951
Provenance
Louis and Charlotte Bergman, New York and Jerusalem (probably acquired from the artist).
Gift from the above to the present owner, 1979.
Literature
M. Laffaille, Raoul Dufy: Catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre peint, Geneva, 1977, vol. IV, p. 41, no. 1434 (illustrated).
Exhibited
San Francisco Museum of Art and Los Angeles County Museum, Raoul Dufy, May-September 1954, p. 40, no. 88.
San Diego, La Jolla Museum of Art, Louis and Charlotte Bergman Collection, July-September 1967, no. 29.

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Vanessa Fusco
Vanessa Fusco

Lot Essay

Dufy, the eldest of nine siblings, was born into musical surroundings. His father, Léon-Marius Dufy, was an organist and conductor for church choirs in his spare time, and two of his brothers, Léon and Gaston, were professional musicians. Gaston would later shift to criticism and often supplied Dufy with concert passes. The artist himself was an amateur violinist, but was more interested in attending the symphony than playing. Music featured prominently in Dufy's art, from his first orchestral composition in 1902, L'orchestre du théâtre du Havre (Laffaille, no. 47), to his later homages to the illustrious composers Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Johann Sebastian Bach, Frédéric Chopin and Claude Debussy, among others.
Le concerto au violon is notable for its striking red tonality. In the later phase of his career, Dufy became preoccupied with the phenomenon of tonal painting, in which one color dominates the entire composition. In particular, he espoused this method of painting with his musical subjects, for he felt the richness of one color offered an emotional intensity akin to the effect of harmonic tonality in the compositions of his favorite composers. Of Dufy's sonorous, evocative colors, the celebrated cellist Pablo Casals once said, "I cannot tell what piece your orchestra is playing, but I know which key it is written in" (quoted in D. Perez-Tibi, Dufy, New York, 1989, p. 292). Le concerto au violon is an exuberant expression of the joy that Dufy found in music.

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