ANDRÉ DERAIN (1880-1954)
ANDRÉ DERAIN (1880-1954)
ANDRÉ DERAIN (1880-1954)
ANDRÉ DERAIN (1880-1954)
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勒內·金佩爾舊藏
安德烈·德蘭(1880 - 1954)

《卡西斯的風景》

細節
安德烈·德蘭
安德烈·德蘭(1880 - 1954)
《卡西斯的風景》
簽名:a Derain(背面)
油彩 畫布
21 3/8 x 25 5/8英寸(54.2 x 65.1公分)
1907年作
來源
巴黎康威勒畫廊(購自上述收藏);1921年11月17日至18日,杜魯酒店拍賣,第二場,拍品編號55
巴黎勒內·金佩爾(購自上述拍賣)
馬賽奧古斯丁·特林(1943年購自上述拍賣)
馬賽市(1987年購自上述收藏;長期借展予坎蒂尼博物館)
2021年1月由巴黎上訴法院於2020年9月30日的決定歸還予金佩爾家族
出版
《Toison d'Or,》,1909年,第29頁,編號203(1909年展覽現場圖,圖III)
G. Hilaire著《Derain》,日內瓦,1959年,第191頁(插圖,圖號44;圖錄有誤)
P.-G. Persin著《Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler: L'aventure d'un grand marchand d'art》,巴黎,1990年,第40頁(插圖)
M. Kellermann著《André Derain: Catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre peint》,巴黎,1992年,第I冊,第81頁,編號129(插圖)
D.J. Kostyrko著《The Journal of a Transatlantic Art Dealer: René Gimpel, 1918-1939》,倫敦,2017年,第290至291頁
展覽
1909年 「Toison d'Or」展覽 莫斯科 第6頁 編號13、14或15(作品名稱《Landscape》)
1951年6月至9月 「Le Fauvisme」展覽 法國國立現代藝術博物館 巴黎 編號33
1964年6月至9月 「Derain」展覽 坎蒂尼博物館 馬賽 編號29(插圖)
1966年1月至5月 「Le fauvisme français et les débuts de l'expressionnisme allemand」展覽 巴黎國立現代藝術博物館及慕尼黑藝術之家 第73頁,編號33(插圖)
1967年8月至9月 Derain」展覽 愛丁堡蘇格蘭皇家學院及倫敦皇家藝術學院 第33頁,編號28(插圖)
1976年5月至6月 「Exposition Derain」展覽 施密特畫廊 巴黎 第32頁,編號16(彩色插圖,第33頁)
1976年11月至1977年4月 「André Derain」展覽 羅馬美第奇別墅及巴黎大皇宮國家美術館 第48頁,編號10(插圖)
1979年5月至11月 「Paris-Moscou」展覽 蓬皮杜中心 國立現代藝術博物館 巴黎 第524頁(插圖,第89頁)
1990年10月至1991年9月 「The Fauve Landscape」展覽 洛杉磯郡立美術館、紐約大都會藝術博物館及倫敦皇家藝術學院 第104頁(彩色插圖,圖號120)
1991年10月至1992年1月 「Un certain Derain」展覽 橘園美術館 第97頁,編號22(彩色插圖)
1994年11月至1995年3月 「André Derain」展覽 現代藝術博物館 巴黎
2017年10月至2018年1月 「André Derain: 1904-1914, la décennie radicale」展覽 蓬皮杜中心 國立現代藝術美術館 巴黎 第170頁(彩色插圖,第171頁)

榮譽呈獻

Emily Kaplan
Emily Kaplan Senior Vice President, Senior Specialist, Co-Head of 20th Century Evening Sale

拍品專文

The Fauvist painter André Derain spent the summer of 1907 in Cassis, a small fishing town in Southern France. The dramatic geography of Cassis, marked by steep limestone cliffs and undulating hills, provided intrepid climbers with sweeping views of the coastal village: a charming cluster of terracotta roofs, nestled alongside the turquoise waters of the Mediterranean Sea. It is from one such elevated vantage point that Derain painted the brilliantly-colored oil on canvas, Paysage à Cassis.
In the present work, Derain embraced certain traditional aspects of the landscape genre: he observed the coastline from atop a gently sloping hill, his view of the water framed by intervening trees. Though this subject was somewhat typical of late nineteenth-century landscapes, Derain’s approach to painting was anything but standard. Each of the aforementioned pictorial elements are significantly flattened; it is only through their overlapping forms, arranged in precise relation to one another, that we are able to understand the recession of space. In his deliberate reduction of form and careful construction of perspective, Derain was certainly influenced by the painter Paul Cézanne. Derain had encountered Cézanne’s landscapes when they were exhibited at the Salon d’Automne of 1904; thereafter he closely studied the older artist’s abstract experiments in modeling volume and space. By 1907, the year after Cézanne’s death, Derain regularly incorporated those formal lessons into his own work.
Unlike Cézanne or any of the other Impressionist painters, however, Derain was not interested in adhering to nature’s own color palette—nor was he concerned with objectively recording natural phenomena. Instead, Derain invested his work with expressive shocks of color, which explicitly defied convention. The ground of Paysage à Cassis, for example, is comprised of surges of mango, coral and blood orange, which seem to flow like lava towards the pale, silvery sea. These hot bursts of pigment further contrast with the linear strokes of bright blue and green that form the bark of the pine trees.
Derain first began to play with sensational color alongside his friend and occasional rival, Henri Matisse. Derain and Matisse had trained together with the painter Eugène Carrière at the Académie Camillo in Paris. In the summer of 1905, Matisse and Derain spent several months together in the seaside town of Collioure, in the Pyrénées-Orientales region of Southern France. The two artists challenged each other to render the surrounding landscape with increasingly hallucinatory hues. Though clearly inspired by the dazzling colors of the Mediterranean coast, Matisse and Derain liberated themselves from the burden of precisely reproducing nature. The brilliant works that Derain painted thereafter, including Paysage à Cassis, convey this profound new sense of artistic freedom. A work such as La mer vue de Collioure (The Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia) demonstartes the shared approach the two artists shared in their approach to the landscape.
For Derain and his cohort, color was nothing short of a revolution, which would upend French academic painting; as Derain’s colleague Maurice de Vlaminck later declared, “I wanted to burn down the École des Beaux-Arts with my cobalts and vermilions, I wanted to express my feelings with my brushes without troubling what painting was like before me” (quoted in J. Leymarie, Fauves and Fauvism, 1987, p. 36). However, not everyone shared the feverish excitement of these young artists. After they exhibited their earliest color experiments at the 1905 Salon d’Automne, the art critic Louis Vauxcelles famously compared Derain, Matisse and Vlaminck to wild beasts, or "Fauves" in French—inadvertently coining the term Fauvism to describe their short-lived but highly influential artistic movement. Indeed, after Derain, modern painting would never be the same again.
The provenance of this work is well documented. Soon after its execution, the painting was acquired from the artist by the German gallerist Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. In 1921, it was included in the first of the dealer’s sequestration sales, where it was bought by the legendary Parisian dealer René Gimpel. After the Germans entered Paris in 1940, Gimpel fled to the south of France. He was forced to sell the present work between 1940 and 1942; Gimpel was thereafter detained by the French Vichy government and died while imprisoned at Neuengamme in Germany. The work was subsequently acquired by Augustin Terrin, before it entered the collection of the city of Marseille in 1987; it was thereafter on extended loan to the Musée Cantini. Given the circumstances of Gimpel’s sale of the painting, Paysage à Cassis was restituted in the Gimpel family in January 2021.

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