GUY PÈNE DU BOIS (1884-1958)
GUY PÈNE DU BOIS (1884-1958)
GUY PÈNE DU BOIS (1884-1958)
GUY PÈNE DU BOIS (1884-1958)
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GUY PÈNE DU BOIS (1884-1958)

Conversation Piece

Details
GUY PÈNE DU BOIS (1884-1958)
Pene du Bois, G.
Conversation Piece
signed and dated ‘Guy Pène du Bois 36’ (lower right)
oil on canvas
40 x 30 in. (101.6 x 76.2 cm.)
Painted in 1936.
Provenance
The artist.
Estate of the above.
James Graham & Sons, New York.
Acquired by the present owner by 1993.
Literature
F. Watson, American Painting Today, New York, 1939, p. 59, illustrated.
Exhibited
(Possibly) Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Carnegie Institute, Annual International Exhibition of Paintings, October-December 1938.
Bloomington, Illinois, Scottish Rite Temple, Central Illinois Art Exposition, March 19-April 8, 1939, no. 64.
Cincinnati, Ohio, Cincinnati Art Museum, The Forty-Eighth Annual Exhibition of American Art, November 8-December 7, 1941, no. 43.
San Francisco, California, Palace of Fine Arts, Golden Gate International Exposition, 1940, pp. 131, 138, no. 1326, illustrated.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 137th Annual Exhibition, January 25-March 1, 1942, no. 14.
Roslyn, New York, Nassau County Museum of Art, Intimates and Confidants in Art: Husbands, Wives, Lovers and Friends, February 28-May 23, 1993, pp. 72, 78, illustrated (as The Conversationalist).
Roslyn, New York, Nassau County Museum of Art, The Long Island Collections, A Century of Art: 1880-1980, April 20-July 18, 1982, p. 66, no. 84, illustrated (as The Conversationalist).
Roslyn, New York, Nassau County Museum of Art, FDR and the WPA Era: Art Across America, August 15-October 31, 2004, pp. 39, 56, illustrated (as The Conversationalists).
Roslyn, New York, Nassau County Museum of Art, Art and Fashion: from Marie Antionette to Jacqueline Kennedy, May 28-August 13, 2006, p. 47, illustrated (as The Conversationalist).

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Lot Essay

Guy Pène du Bois is renowned for his clever, satirical depictions of the interactions of New York’s high society. Beginning during his time under Robert Henri at the New York School of Art, Pène du Bois established himself as an ardent realist, intent upon capturing the various people and social classes that he encountered. Rather than positioning himself as a participant, Pène du Bois once said: "the artist must not forget that he is an observer, a man watching the parade from a safe though convenient distance and armed, in any case, with enough strength of character to be kept physically out of it." (as quoted in "Guy Pène du Bois," International Studio, June 1922, p. 245)

Conversation Piece adopts the subtle social commentary typical of his work from the 1930s, though Pène du Bois—who had often struggled with finances himself—no doubt pokes fun at the extravagance to which these subjects appear accustomed. “His world on the canvas was that of the fashionable pleasure seeker…Du Bois seems to make a statement about the inner fabric of his subjects,” and the present work is no exception. (C. Schwartz, T. Saltman, The Long Island Collections, A Century of Art: 1880-1980, exhibition catalogue, New York, 1982, p. 66)

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