PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
2 更多
On occasion, Christie's has a direct financial int… 顯示更多 先鋒創見:保羅·艾倫珍藏
巴布羅·畢加索(1881 - 1973)

《四個浴者》

細節
巴布羅·畢加索巴布羅·畢加索(1881 - 1973)《四個浴者》簽名及日期:Picasso 21(右下)蛋彩 牛皮紙 裱於木板4 x 6英寸(10 x 15.1公分)1921年作
來源
紐約約翰·奎因(1922年7月)
紐約保羅·羅森伯格(1926年,並由後人繼承);倫敦蘇富比帕克勃內,1979年7月3日,拍品編號23
巴黎海因茲·貝格胡安
紐約邁克·尼科爾斯(購自上述收藏)
已故藏家於1998年購入
出版
M. Raynal著《Picasso》,慕尼黑,1921年(插圖,圖號61;1922年作及媒介有誤)
A.H. Barr著《Jr., Picasso: Fifty Years of his Art》,紐約,1946年,第117頁(插圖;作品名稱《Four Classic Figures》)
M. Gieure著《Initiation à l'oeuvre de Picasso》,巴黎,1951年,第71及333頁(插圖,圖48)
C. Zervos著《Pablo Picasso》,巴黎,1951年,第4冊,編號278(插圖,圖號98;媒介有誤)
F. Elgar及R. Maillard著《Picasso》,巴黎,1955年(插圖)
B.L. Reid著《The Man from New York: John Quinn and his Friends》,紐約,1968年,第551至552及683頁,注釋61(作品名稱《Four Classic Figures》)
J. Palau i Fabre著《Picasso: From the Ballets to the Drama, 1917-1926》,科隆,1999年,第510頁,編號1017(插圖,第269頁;作品名稱《Four Naked Bathers》,媒介有誤)
U. Weisner編「Picassos Klassizismus: Werke 1914-1934」展覽目錄,比勒費爾德美術館,1988年,第323頁,編號43a(插圖)
展覽
1939年11月至1943年4月 「Picasso: Forty Years of his Art」展覽 紐約現代藝術博物館、芝加哥美術館、聖路易斯城市美術館、波士頓美術館、舊金山現代藝術博物館、辛辛那提藝術博物館、克利夫蘭美術館、新奧爾良艾薩克·德爾加多博物館、明尼阿波利斯藝術學院、匹茲堡卡內基學院、由提卡州孟森‧威廉斯‧普羅克托藝術學院、 达勒姆杜克大學、堪薩斯城威廉·羅克希爾·尼爾森美術館、密爾瓦基藝術設計學院、大急流城美術館、漢諾威達特茅斯學院、波基普西瓦薩學院、韋爾斯利學院、弗吉尼亞州斯威特·布賴爾學院、威廉斯敦威廉斯學院、布盧明頓印第安納大學藝術中心畫廊、奧爾頓蒙蒂塞洛學院及緬因州波特蘭美術館 第103頁,編號153(插圖;作品名稱《Four Classic Figures》)
1957年5月至12月 「Picasso: 75th Anniversary Exhibition」展覽 紐約現代藝術博物館及芝加哥美術館 第55頁(插圖;媒介有誤)
1962年4月至5月 「Picasso: An American Tribute」展覽 杜文兄弟公司 紐約 編號14(插圖;媒介有誤)
2006年4月至2007年1月 「DoubleTake: From Monet to Lichtenstein」展覽 流行文化博物館 西雅圖 第19頁(彩色插圖;媒介有誤)
注意事項
On occasion, Christie's has a direct financial interest in the outcome of the sale of certain lots consigned for sale. This will usually be where it has guaranteed to the Seller that whatever the outcome of the auction, the Seller will receive a minimum sale price for the work. This is known as a minimum price guarantee. Where Christie's has provided a Minimum Price Guarantee it is at risk of making a loss, which can be significant, if the lot fails to sell. Christie's therefore sometimes chooses to share that risk with a third party. In such cases the third party agrees prior to the auction to place an irrevocable written bid on the lot. The third party is therefore committed to bidding on the lot and, even if there are no other bids, buying the lot at the level of the written bid unless there are any higher bids. In doing so, the third party takes on all or part of the risk of the lot not being sold. If the lot is not sold, the third party may incur a loss. The third party will be remunerated in exchange for accepting this risk based on a fixed fee if the third party is the successful bidder or on the final hammer price in the event that the third party is not the successful bidder. The third party may also bid for the lot above the written bid. Third party guarantors are required by us to disclose to anyone they are advising their financial interest in any lots they are guaranteeing. However, for the avoidance of any doubt, if you are advised by or bidding through an agent on a lot identified as being subject to a third party guarantee you should always ask your agent to confirm whether or not he or she has a financial interest in relation to the lot.

榮譽呈獻

Max Carter
Max Carter Vice Chairman, 20th and 21st Century Art, Americas

拍品專文

Formerly in the collection of John Quinn and featured in Alfred H. Barr Jr.’s landmark retrospective of the artist held at The Museum of Modern Art, New York in 1939, Picasso: Forty Years of his Art, Quatre baigneuses of 1921 presents a timeless, arcadian idyll, a vision of ancient Italy or Greece perhaps. While both style and subject matter would appear to seem at odds within the modernist avant-garde, Picasso’s Neo-Classicism was not only perfectly in keeping with the prevailing “Return to Order” that dominated the post-war art world, but at the same time, his daringly overt, sometime parodic, exaggerated embrace of this idiom at this time ensured that he continued to pave the way for his contemporaries. “By explicitly embracing history,” Michael Fitzgerald has written, “Picasso escaped the strictures of an increasingly rigid modernism to define a more vital alternative” (“The Modernists’ Dilemma: Neoclassicism and the Portrayal of Olga Khokhlova,” in Picasso and Portraiture, exh. cat., The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1996, p. 297).
At the time that Picasso painted Quatre baigneuses, his artistic imagination was steeped in the classical world of the past. Successive stays in the south of France in the preceding years, including Juan les Pins in 1920, meant that Mediterranean classicism had seeped in to his psyche, as he began producing depictions of nude men and women reclining on the beach, alone or in groups, in both oil paint, pastel, as well as pencil drawings.
These volumetric nudes reached their apogee in Picasso’s art the following year. More and more compositions flowed from Picasso’s hand, as he explored evermore complex arrangements of figures and gradually increased their size and form. As the present work demonstrates, Picasso transformed his bathers into weighty, monumental figures, their bodies enlarged and rounded, painted with dappled strokes that lend the sense they are carved from stone. In this way, Picasso formed his own Neo-Classical idiom, borrowing different parts of the antique in the creation of a novel aesthetic.
Carefully framed by the terracotta-colored walls, with an expansive vista stretching out beyond, Quatre baigneuses offers a window onto a faraway world—an escapist vision of a different era. At the time that Picasso painted the present work, his personal life was in the midst of change. In February 1921, his wife, Olga, had given birth to the couple’s first child, a son, Paul. A Russian-born ballet dancer whom Picasso had met when she was performing with the Ballets Russes in 1917, Olga had a clear vision of how she wanted her and her husband to live: as key members of the Parisian beau monde, holidaying in the fashionable south of France, and part of the social whirl of the city.
After Paul’s birth, Françoise Gilot later described, “Olga’s ambitions made increasingly greater demands on [Picasso’s] time… then began his period of what the French call le high-life, with nurse, chambermaid, cook, chauffeur and all the rest, expensive and at the same time distracting. In spring and summer they went to Juan-les-Pins, Cap d’Antibes, and Monte Carlo, where—as in Paris—Pablo found himself more and more involved with fancy dress balls, masquerades, and all the other high jinks of the 1920s, often in company with Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, the Gerald Murphys, the Count and Countess Etienne de Beaumont, and other international birds of paradise” (quoted in J. Richardson, A Life of Picasso: The Triumphant Years 1917-1932, New York, 2007, vol. III, p. 173). Gradually, the couple’s marriage deteriorated, and Picasso’s desire to be part of this bourgeois world waned. Regarded in this context, the present work can be seen as an escapist fantasy of an alternate realm.

更多來自 先鋒創見:保羅·艾倫珍藏第一部分

查看全部
查看全部