Jacques Lipchitz (1891-1973)
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF DR. HERBERT KAYDEN AND DR. GABRIELLE REEMJACQUES LIPCHITZ: PAINTINGS AND SCULPTURES IN THE KAYDEN COLLECTIONThe celebrated collection of Dr. Herbert Kayden and Dr. Gabrielle Reem includes prime examples of works by one of the great masters of twentieth-century sculpture, Jacques Lipchitz. The couple had a long-standing relationship with the artist, who worked across a wide range of media, primarily favored bronze. In 1909 at the age of 18, Lipchitz left his native city of Druskininkai, in present-day Lithuania, and moved to Paris to study at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and the Académie Julian. There Lipchitz befriended Pablo Picasso, Juan Gris, Diego Rivera, and many of the other leading avant-garde artists living in Paris at that time. In 1914, inspired by the radical new artistic style he witnessed, he shifted away from classically inspired anatomical representation and began to integrate Cubist aesthetic principles into his work, quickly becoming one of the most prominent sculptors working in that style. He was able to brilliantly translate the abstract vision of objects deconstructed into a series of angular geometric planes into the three-dimensional realm. Even when working primarily with the Cubist vernacular, he always sought to imbue his constructions and sculptures with a human element by carefully balancing figuration with abstraction. By the early 1920s, Lipchitz was world-renowned. In 1922, the artist was commissioned by the preeminent American collector Dr. Albert C. Barnes to complete a series of seven limestone reliefs for his museum. Shortly after this major commission, Lipchitz began to favor increasingly more fluid forms in his work.The carefully curated Kayden Collection spans five decades of the artist’s work (1910-1970), and consists of works from the most important periods of Lipchitz’s prodigious oeuvre: the highly celebrated Cubist sculptures and gouaches executed between 1915 and 1925, his innovative “transparents” of the mid-to-late 1920s, and his signature mature style of highly dynamic and expressive labyrinthine forms. Additionally, the collection is representative of Lipchitz’s principal themes, including: biblical and mythological motifs and allegories as represented in his Le viol d’Europe I and Peace on Earth; universal human themes of joy and sorrow such as his work Happy Birthday; studies of the human form as in Etude pour Figure: Maquette no. 3, Composition cubiste, and Figure; and iconographies of sound exemplified in this collection by Woman with Guitar: Maquette No. 2 and Instruments de musique (format hexagonal) I. In addition to the seven bronzes (one of which is being offered in our Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale on November 12th), the group of works from the Kayden Collection on offer contains an exquisite ebony carving and two superb examples of the artist’s Cubist gouaches from 1918. As one of the finest private assemblies of Lipchitz’s works, the Kayden Collection amply displays the collectors’ passion, discerning eye for quality, cohesive sense of taste, and their personal relationship with the artist.PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF DR. HERBERT KAYDEN AND DR. GABRIELLE REEM
Jacques Lipchitz (1891-1973)

Composition cubiste

细节
Jacques Lipchitz (1891-1973)
Composition cubiste
signed 'J. Lipchitz' (lower left)
gouache and pencil on panel
18 ¼ x 14 ¾ in. (46.4 x 37.5 cm.)
Executed in March 1918
来源
Galerie de l'Effort Moderne (Léonce Rosenberg), Paris.

荣誉呈献

David Kleiweg de Zwaan
David Kleiweg de Zwaan

拍品专文

Pierre Levai has confirmed the authenticity of this work.

Executed in 1918 during the height of Lipchitz’s Cubist period, Composition cubiste is a beautifully rendered example of his rigorously architectural interpretation of the style’s syntax, emphasizing extreme verticality and layered rectangular planes. In this painting, Lipchitz presents an embracing couple with their abstracted fragments captivatingly comingled. The theme of the embrace, usually of the erotic variety, is repeated in Lipchitz’s maquettes of the 1920s and 1930s. Moreover, the work reflects Lipchitz’s full embrace of the aesthetic principles of deconstructing and abstracting forms. After moving to Paris in 1909, Lipchitz quickly joined the artistic communities of Montmartre and Montparnasse which included a young Pablo Picasso, Juan Gris, and Amedeo Modigliani. By 1915 he had adopted the Cubist aesthetic principles through his art, and in Gris, Lipchitz found a close friend and companion in artistic innovation. This brief yet intense relationship greatly influenced the styles of both artists. With the onslaught of German bombings in Paris in 1918, Lipchitz and his wife Berthe moved to Beaulieu-le-Loches where they temporarily shared a house with Gris and his wife. Frustrated by the restrictions on his ability to produce sculpture in his new setting, especially in bronze, Lipchitz turned his attention to gouaches such as Composition cubiste, as well as carving in stone.
As the title suggests, the true subject of this painting is the composite and multifaceted rendering of space, the beauty of the abstracted geometric shapes, and the complex relationships between the figures. The artist masterfully eliminates all traditional perspectival clues from the composition by flattening the couple into geometric, two-dimensional forms pulled parallel to the picture plane. He achieves a simultaneous portrayal of multiple viewpoints through his use of color and forms that delineate the various spatial planes and body parts of the composition. Regarding his drawings and paintings circa 1915, Lipchitz explains, “When I drew I was thinking about pronounced planes and I used color to indicate the positions of the planes in space, with the white closest, the gray in the middle distance, and the black farthest back as though it were in shadow” (My Life in Sculpture, New York, 1972, p. 31). Each architectonic component element contributes to a harmonious, rhythmic pattern across the picture plane.
(fig. 1) Jacques Lipchitz, Composition cubiste, 1918. Sold, Christie’s, New York, 9 May 2013, lot 127.

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