拍品专文
This work is sold with a photo-certificate from Marguerite Duthuit.
Henri Matisse’s Portrait of Louis Aragon captures a sense of the close working friendship that existed between the iconic artist and the Surrealist writer and poet during the early 1940s, particularly during Aragon’s visits to the artist’s home in Nice as he began his iconic biography of the acclaimed painter. In return, Matisse began a suite of portrait drawings of the writer, following the sequential method he had perfected in his acclaimed Thèmes et Variations portfolio, for which Aragon also wrote an introductory essay. In these elegant drawings, the artist focused on capturing variations of a single subject, beginning with charcoal sketches before embarking on a series of pure line drawings to reveal the multiple aspects of its character across a number of images.
Presenting an almost cinematic sequence of views, moving from front to three-quarter and profile views of the sitter, Matisse executed four charcoal drawings of Aragon, as well as thirty-four studies in pen and black ink, including the present work. Using a series of reduced, but flowing, lines, Matisse eloquently captures Aragon’s likeness through the briefest outlines of his form. Describing the process, Aragon wrote: ‘The pencil flies over the great sheet of paper fast, as fast as possible, as if it were trying to beat a record… Matisse does not for one moment glance down at his hand’ (Aragon, quoted in Matisse: The Master, by H. Spurling, London, 2005, p. 406). Although the year ‘1943’ appears in the artist’s handwriting at the bottom left hand side of the page, Aragon explained that this was mistakenly inscribed by Matisse at a later date, and that all were created during the spring of 1942.
Following the completion of the series of drawings, Aragon found it difficult to identify himself in the images Matisse had produced. Suffering both physically and mentally as a result of the deprivations of life in war-torn France, and filled with an all-consuming anxiety regarding the safety of his friends and family, Aragon failed to see himself in the confident, fresh-faced debonair that populated Matisse’s drawings. It took him a long time to realise the accuracy of Matisse’s portrayal, acknowledging that the artist had managed to capture not one, ‘but thirty of my different selves’ (Aragon, quoted in ibid). Indeed, each of the thirty-four line drawings Matisse produced of Aragon are marked by a strong a sense of individuality, as subtle changes, details and shifts in their focus slowly reveal the many different facets of the great writer’s character.
Henri Matisse’s Portrait of Louis Aragon captures a sense of the close working friendship that existed between the iconic artist and the Surrealist writer and poet during the early 1940s, particularly during Aragon’s visits to the artist’s home in Nice as he began his iconic biography of the acclaimed painter. In return, Matisse began a suite of portrait drawings of the writer, following the sequential method he had perfected in his acclaimed Thèmes et Variations portfolio, for which Aragon also wrote an introductory essay. In these elegant drawings, the artist focused on capturing variations of a single subject, beginning with charcoal sketches before embarking on a series of pure line drawings to reveal the multiple aspects of its character across a number of images.
Presenting an almost cinematic sequence of views, moving from front to three-quarter and profile views of the sitter, Matisse executed four charcoal drawings of Aragon, as well as thirty-four studies in pen and black ink, including the present work. Using a series of reduced, but flowing, lines, Matisse eloquently captures Aragon’s likeness through the briefest outlines of his form. Describing the process, Aragon wrote: ‘The pencil flies over the great sheet of paper fast, as fast as possible, as if it were trying to beat a record… Matisse does not for one moment glance down at his hand’ (Aragon, quoted in Matisse: The Master, by H. Spurling, London, 2005, p. 406). Although the year ‘1943’ appears in the artist’s handwriting at the bottom left hand side of the page, Aragon explained that this was mistakenly inscribed by Matisse at a later date, and that all were created during the spring of 1942.
Following the completion of the series of drawings, Aragon found it difficult to identify himself in the images Matisse had produced. Suffering both physically and mentally as a result of the deprivations of life in war-torn France, and filled with an all-consuming anxiety regarding the safety of his friends and family, Aragon failed to see himself in the confident, fresh-faced debonair that populated Matisse’s drawings. It took him a long time to realise the accuracy of Matisse’s portrayal, acknowledging that the artist had managed to capture not one, ‘but thirty of my different selves’ (Aragon, quoted in ibid). Indeed, each of the thirty-four line drawings Matisse produced of Aragon are marked by a strong a sense of individuality, as subtle changes, details and shifts in their focus slowly reveal the many different facets of the great writer’s character.