Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940)
No sales tax is due on the purchase price of this … 顯示更多 Property formerly in the Collection of Janice Levin, Sold to Benefit The Philip and Janice Levin Foundation*
Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940)

Arthur Fontaine lisant--I

細節
Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940)
Arthur Fontaine lisant--I
stamped with signature 'E Vuillard' (Lugt 2497a; lower right)
oil on board laid down on canvas
24½ x 24¼ in. (62.2 x 61.6 cm.)
Painted in 1904
來源
Estate of the artist.
Galerie René Drouin, Paris (1943).
Galerie Georges Moos, Geneva (1948).
Silvan Rocher, Solothurn, Switzerland (circa 1949).
Galerie Beyeler, Basel (1986).
Paul Josefowitz, London.
Anon. sale, Sotheby's, New York, 11 November 1987, lot 59.
Janice Levin, New York (acquired at the above sale).
Gift from the above to the present owner, 2001.
出版
A. Salomon and G. Cogeval, Vuillard, Le Regard innombrable, Catalogue critique des peintures et pastels, Paris, 2003, vol. II, p. 693, no. VII-311 (illustrated in color).
展覽
Paris, Galerie René Drouin, Le portrait français, June-July 1943, no. 94.
Stockholm, Galerie d'Art Latin, Vuillard, 1948, no. 8 (titled Interieur portrait d'homme). Kunsthalle Basel, Edouard Vuillard, March-May 1949, no. 203 (titled Der Grüne Salon).
New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, A Very Private Collection: Janice H. Levin's Impressionist Pictures, November 2002-February 2003, pp. 98-101, no. 26 (illustrated in color, p. 98).
The Birmingham Museum of Art and elsewhere, An Impressionist Eye: Painting and Sculpture from the Philip and Janice Levin Foundation, February 2004-January 2005.
注意事項
No sales tax is due on the purchase price of this lot if it is picked up or delivered in the State of New York.
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*This lot may be tax exempt from the sales tax as set forth in the Sales Tax Notice at the back of the catalogue.

拍品專文

Arthur Fontaine was an industrialist who, after twenty years of service as Director of Labour, was appointed Chairman of the International Labour Organization following World War I. Beyond his interest in Socialist issues, however, lay a fondness for the merely social, for in addition to professionally supporting miners' issues, he and his wife Marie privately welcomed painters, writers and musicians to salon-style gatherings in their home. The present work attentively illustrates the interior of 2, avenue de Villars, the Fontaine home that served as the setting for these soirées, where luminaries such as Claude Debussy and André Gide were in regular attendance.

At the turn of the century, Vuillard's work began to reflect a shift outward for the artist, both personally and professionally. Though he would ever remain the intimiste, as the present work attests, he began to leave the interior of his own home--the base of his muse-mother's corset-making business--in favor of new spaces. Thanks to the Bernheim brothers, he now had a formal dealer relationship, and cultured patrons like Fontaine contributed to a quieter appreciation of Vuillard and his fellow former Nabis. Maurice Denis, for example, was even closer to Fontaine than was Vuillard, and his Les muses decorated a prominent wall in Fontaine's home (Musée d'Orsay, Paris).

Compositionally, the present work is grounded by a regularity of vertical and horizontal frames--ceiling, doorway and window moldings, panes and furniture legs, and of course the two central pictures within the picture. The loose, almost scrubby brushwork, especially apparent in the freely described floral centerpiece, however, keeps the painting from succumbing to any rigidness its geometry might otherwise promote. Further, Vuillard's asymmetrical placement of the subject in the corner of the arrangement not only dynamizes the work's rhythm, but adds to the cozy intimacy of the scene. In a related work from the same year, Causerie chez les Fontaine (fig. 1; Salomon and Cogeval, vol. II, no. VII-310), a comparable closeness is achieved, this time by nestling the couple in a distant corner of the room, rather than a close corner of the painting. In both cases, Belinda Thomson's observation of Vuillard's "skill at catching character and mood through pose, placement and silhouette," proves relevant (B. Thomson, Vuillard, New York, 1988, p. 64). In the present work, Vuillard's depiction of Arthur Fontaine reading amidst his art collection--the paintings positioned more prominently than the collector--pays fitting tribute to this figure's cultured urbanity and genuine interest in benefaction.
One can speculate that Fontaine might be engaged in the poetry of Stéphane Mallarmé, another frequent attendee of salons within this upper bourgeois circle, and one to whose poetry Vuillard's own aesthetics have been compared. In this work, "the foreground, middleground and background overlap and fuse into a pulsating space that bears a kind of relation to the fusion of imagery in a poem by Mallarmé" (A. Carnduff Ritchie, Vuillard, exh. cat., The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1954, p. 16).

(fig. 1) Edouard Vuillard, Causerie chez les Fontaine, 1904. Private collection. BARCODE: 25228236