Kees van Dongen (1877-1968)
Kees van Dongen (1877-1968)

Vase de chrysanthèmes

Details
Kees van Dongen (1877-1968)
Vase de chrysanthèmes
signed 'Van Dongen.' (lower left)
oil on canvas
51 3/8 x 35 1/8 in. (130.5 x 89.2 cm.)
Painted in 1918
Provenance
Galerie Charpentier, Paris (by 1942).
Galerie Pétridès, Paris.
O'Hana Gallery, London.
Anon. sale, Christie's, New York, 19 May 1982, lot 42.
Nathan A. Bernstein Co., New York.
Private collection, Switzerland; sale, Christie's, London, 26 June 1996, lot 281.
Acquired at the above sale by the present owner.
Exhibited
Paris, Galerie Charpentier, Kees van Dongen, Cinquante ans de peintures, 1942.
Paris, Galerie Charpentier, L'Automne, 1943.
Tucson, The University of Arizona Museum of Art and Kansas City, Nelson Gallery-Atkins Museum, Cornelis Theodorus Marie Van Dongen, February-March 1971, p. 188, no. 106 (illustrated in color, p. 86).

Lot Essay

Jacques Chalom des Cordes will include this painting in his forthcoming Van Dongen catalogue critique being prepared under the sponsorship of the Wildenstein Institute.

Van Dongen would return to the theme of the flower still life throughout his life, often handling the subject with a similar intensity to his Fauve works and paintings of women. Vase de chrysanthèmes is full of painterly flashes. The lush, saturated hues are applied in thick brushstrokes and convey the involvement of the artist in depicting the scene before him.

Guillaume Apollinaire, along with Van Dongen a leading member of the bande à Picasso that had formed in Montmartre at the turn of the century and went on to change the course of Western art in the years leading up to the First World War, commented on Van Dongen in 1918: "This colorist has, above all, drawn an acute excitement from electric lighting and has added to it the nuances. The result is an intoxication, a dazzle, a vibrancy, and the color, holding fast to an extraordinary individuality, swoons, exalts itself, sails, grows dim, faints away, without ever clouding over the clarity of shade" (quoted in G. Diehl, Van Dongen, New York, 1988, p. 85).

For Van Dongen the subject matter before him, whether the erotic female form, an elaborate circus scene or a vibrant floral still life, was only ever an excuse for his own exuberant explorations into color and texture. "In fact, the model was for him only a pretext, a motif for his exaltation, a point of departure from which to transpose his vision lyrically, to introduce the deformations that he deemed necessary, to reconstruct the ensemble according to his needs" (ibid., p. 87).

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