PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF VERONIQUE AND GREGORY PECK My parents acquired Les deux figures from Bill Beadleston in 1984. They were looking for a painting that would complement the rest of their collection, would have "wall power," and would resonate for them personally. My father often talked about the tenderness between the two massive figures. Maybe he was seeing himself and his love for Veronique in it. I know that whoever lives with this extraordinary painting next will project their own feelings onto it. I hope they know that Gregory and Veronique Peck loved the painting very much and saw themselves in that tender embrace. For me, Les deux figures will always tell the story of the abiding love between my parents. --Cecilia Peck Voll Veronique and Gregory Peck were the very embodiment of Hollywood's Golden Age: talented, stylish, and exceedingly generous, they touched the lives of all who knew them and the millions who watched Mr. Peck on the silver screen. The actor forged a legendary career as an honest hero, the American everyman the New York Times labeled "the embodiment of decency." Peck worked his way from the stages of the University of California to the pinnacle of Hollywood stardom, defying the brash swagger of the typical film hero for a persona that was passionate, authentic, and all his own. From Roman Holiday (1953) to Moby Dick (1956) and To Kill a Mockingbird (1962), Peck's performances remain unforgettable; and his legacy, alongside his wife Veronique, as an impassioned and unspoken supporter of charitable causes left an indelible mark on American society. By the early 1950s, Gregory Peck was known throughout the world as the man who garnered four Academy Award nominations in his first five years in film. A new kind of Hollywood leading man--strong but compassionate, brave but human--Peck first met reporter Veronique Passani at an interview in 1953. When the actor returned to Europe to film Roman Holiday, he surprised Passani with an invitation to lunch, and a meal on Paris's Left Bank heralded the beginning of a lifelong romance. If a marriage could ever be considered a partnership, it was certainly so with the Pecks. As Mr. Peck filmed across the globe, his wife was always on hand for creative guidance and to run lines. When the producer Alan J. Pakula offered the actor the lead in an adaptation of a Southern writer's debut novel, Peck requested two copies of the work so his wife could also judge the project's merits. The role was lawyer Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee's American classic for which Gregory Peck will remain best remembered. "What you saw on screen with Greg was what you saw off screen," the couple's publicist Monroe Friedman remembered. "The same could be said of [Veronique]." The Pecks were unwavering and dedicated philanthropists. As Chairman of the American Cancer Society, Mr. Peck toured the country with his wife at his side, raising $50 million for the organization. Favorite causes included the Inner City Repertory Theater of Los Angeles; the La Jolla Playhouse; the film department at University College, Dublin; the Los Angeles Music Center; and, as a lasting legacy in the actor's name, the Gregory Peck Reading Series at the Los Angeles Public Library. Mr. Peck held numerous leadership positions, including Founding Chairman of the American Film Institute, President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Chairman of the Motion Picture and Television Relief Fund, and Chairman of the National Council on the Arts. In recognition of Veronique Peck's philanthropy, the Los Angeles Times named her "Woman of the Year" in 1967, and in 2009 she was awarded the Light of Learning Award from the Los Angeles Library Foundation. Mrs. Peck watched as her husband won the Academy Award for Best Actor in To Kill a Mockingbird, the Presidential Medal of Freedom (the nation's highest civilian honor), and numerous lifetime achievement awards. "Gregory Peck was a beautiful man," Harper Lee remarked upon the actor's death. "Atticus Finch gave him the opportunity to play himself." No one was more infatuated with Mr. Peck than his wife Veronique, and vice versa: "You never saw two people more delighted with each other," Friedman said. Indeed, they stood together as legends of American society for nearly half a century. PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF VERONIQUE AND GREGORY PECK
Fernand Leger (1881-1955)

Les deux figures

成交价 美元 3,035,750
估价
美元 3,000,000 – 美元 5,000,000
估价不包括买家酬金。成交总额为下锤价加以买家酬金及扣除可适用之费用。
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Fernand Leger (1881-1955)

Les deux figures

成交价 美元 3,035,750
 
成交价 美元 3,035,750
 
细节
Fernand Leger (1881-1955)
Les deux figures
signed and dated 'F. LEGER. 29' (lower right); signed and dated again, titled and inscribed 'F. LEGER. 29/Les deux figures/Definitif.' (on the reverse)
oil on canvas
36 3/8 x 28 7/8 in. (92.1 x 73.3 cm.)
Painted in 1929
来源
Galerie Paul Rosenberg, Paris (acquired from the artist).
Paul Rosenberg & Co., New York (acquired from the above).
E.V. Thaw & Co., Inc., New York (1960).
Burt Kleiner, Beverly Hills.
Paul Kantor Gallery, Beverly Hills.
Galerie Tarica, Paris.
Galerie Kaplan, London.
Leonard Hutton Galleries, New York.
Martin Sanders, New York (circa 1973).
Anon. sale, Kornfeld und Klipstein, Bern, 19 June 1980, lot 784.
William Beadleston, Inc., New York.
Acquired from the above by the late owners, 1984.
出版
"Hommage à Fernand Léger" in Derrière le Miroir, nos. 79-80-81, October-November-December 1955, p. 6 (illustrated in color).
G. Bauquier, Fernand Léger: Catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre peint, 1929-1931, Paris, 1995, vol. IV, p. 112, no. 668 (illustrated in color, p. 113).
展览
Paris, Galerie Maeght, Hommage à Fernand Léger: peintures de 1920 à 1930, October-December 1955, no. 9 (illustrated).
Jerusalem, Israel Museum, 1978-1979 (on extended loan).

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