377
Marc Chagall
Le peintre dans son atelier, 1976.
Tempera
Estimate:
€ 100,000 / $ 110,000 Sold:
€ 134,200 / $ 147,620 (incl. surcharge)
Le peintre dans son atelier. 1976.
Tempera, pastel- and wax chalk and pencil.
Signed lower right. On thin wove paper, laid on light board. 34,9 x 27,4 cm (13,7 x 10,7 in), the full sheet. [EH].
Accompanied by a photo expertise issued by Jean Louis Prat, Comité Marc Chagall, Paris from 10 December, 2012. With registration number 2012083 K .
PROVENANCE: Private ownership Switzerland.
Chagall spends his student days at first in Witebsk, then at the academy of Petersburg under Leon Bakst, who points out Cézanne, van Gogh and Gauguin to him. The place of these influences is taken by cubist and Fauvistic tendencies, which Chagall incorporates more and more into his work from 1914 on, when he stays in Paris for four years. Chagall develops his very own style - his motifs being comprised of an unreal combination of symbolic pictures, which consist of Jewish-religious childhood experiences and Russian folk art combined with dream-like elements and the influence of the modern art discovered in Paris - only after his return to Russia. In 1919 he founds an art school in Witebsk and becomes its principal. That same year he takes over the décor and costumes of the Jewish theatre in Moscow. In 1922 Chagall leaves Russia for good and returns to France, with a stop in Berlin, where the first graphic papers and etchings for his autobiography 'My Life' emerge. Arriving in Paris in 1923, Chagall makes the acquaintance of the art trader Vollard, who commissions the illustration of Gogol's book 'Die toten Seelen'. After 100 more etchings for La Fontaine's 'fables' the bible illustrations start to develop in 1930; 105 sheets all together. Extensive trips take the artist to Palestine, Egypt, the Netherlands, England and Spain. In 1941 Chagall flees to the USA, where he lives the following six years. In this time he designs the stage sets for ballet performances of Tschaikowski ('Aleko') and Strawinsky ('Feuervogel'). After a big exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in 1946 the artist returns to France in 1950. A few large commissions interrupt his quiet life in Vence: Chagall designs glass windows for several public buildings, e.g. the cathedral of Metz (1958), the synagogue of the Hadassah-university clinic near Jerusalem (1960) or the house of the United Nations in New York (1964). He also gets the commission for a ceiling fresco for the opera of Paris. When it is finished in 1964, Chagall starts some wall paintings at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, which are christened in 1967. Beyond that, the extensive work of Chagall includes the areas of ceramics and plastic art, at which the artist tries his hands from 1950 on.
Our composition takes us to a very personal level of meaning. His pictures speak through their meaningful depth. Private elements, in this case the window of his house in Vence, the easel with the nocturnal flower still life, the artist's palette, his wife in the background, seem to have been composed incidentally. However, each element means a lot to the artist. As far as form is concerned, at this time Marc Chagall put the emphasis in his compositions on the atmosphere created by the colors. In our work it is the variety of shades of blue, which emanate an atmosphere of nocturnal melancholia. The woman in the back, the self portrait and the flower bouquet in strong shades of mauve and red conjure up a merry and warm love. Marc Chagall employs colors with great intensity and lets them shine. In doing so his style creates a lyrical and easy magic.
Next to numerous honors, Chagall received the medal of the Legion of Honor from France's president Valéry Giscard d’Estaing in 1977. Exhbitions world-wide followed, they all showed how important Chagall was for art of the 20th century. As of 1978 Chagall made glass-stained windows for the church St. Stephan in Mainz, nine were executed during the artist's lifetime. After his death on 28 March, 1985 the remaining windows were executed by his students.
Tempera, pastel- and wax chalk and pencil.
Signed lower right. On thin wove paper, laid on light board. 34,9 x 27,4 cm (13,7 x 10,7 in), the full sheet. [EH].
Accompanied by a photo expertise issued by Jean Louis Prat, Comité Marc Chagall, Paris from 10 December, 2012. With registration number 2012083 K .
PROVENANCE: Private ownership Switzerland.
Chagall spends his student days at first in Witebsk, then at the academy of Petersburg under Leon Bakst, who points out Cézanne, van Gogh and Gauguin to him. The place of these influences is taken by cubist and Fauvistic tendencies, which Chagall incorporates more and more into his work from 1914 on, when he stays in Paris for four years. Chagall develops his very own style - his motifs being comprised of an unreal combination of symbolic pictures, which consist of Jewish-religious childhood experiences and Russian folk art combined with dream-like elements and the influence of the modern art discovered in Paris - only after his return to Russia. In 1919 he founds an art school in Witebsk and becomes its principal. That same year he takes over the décor and costumes of the Jewish theatre in Moscow. In 1922 Chagall leaves Russia for good and returns to France, with a stop in Berlin, where the first graphic papers and etchings for his autobiography 'My Life' emerge. Arriving in Paris in 1923, Chagall makes the acquaintance of the art trader Vollard, who commissions the illustration of Gogol's book 'Die toten Seelen'. After 100 more etchings for La Fontaine's 'fables' the bible illustrations start to develop in 1930; 105 sheets all together. Extensive trips take the artist to Palestine, Egypt, the Netherlands, England and Spain. In 1941 Chagall flees to the USA, where he lives the following six years. In this time he designs the stage sets for ballet performances of Tschaikowski ('Aleko') and Strawinsky ('Feuervogel'). After a big exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in 1946 the artist returns to France in 1950. A few large commissions interrupt his quiet life in Vence: Chagall designs glass windows for several public buildings, e.g. the cathedral of Metz (1958), the synagogue of the Hadassah-university clinic near Jerusalem (1960) or the house of the United Nations in New York (1964). He also gets the commission for a ceiling fresco for the opera of Paris. When it is finished in 1964, Chagall starts some wall paintings at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, which are christened in 1967. Beyond that, the extensive work of Chagall includes the areas of ceramics and plastic art, at which the artist tries his hands from 1950 on.
Our composition takes us to a very personal level of meaning. His pictures speak through their meaningful depth. Private elements, in this case the window of his house in Vence, the easel with the nocturnal flower still life, the artist's palette, his wife in the background, seem to have been composed incidentally. However, each element means a lot to the artist. As far as form is concerned, at this time Marc Chagall put the emphasis in his compositions on the atmosphere created by the colors. In our work it is the variety of shades of blue, which emanate an atmosphere of nocturnal melancholia. The woman in the back, the self portrait and the flower bouquet in strong shades of mauve and red conjure up a merry and warm love. Marc Chagall employs colors with great intensity and lets them shine. In doing so his style creates a lyrical and easy magic.
Next to numerous honors, Chagall received the medal of the Legion of Honor from France's president Valéry Giscard d’Estaing in 1977. Exhbitions world-wide followed, they all showed how important Chagall was for art of the 20th century. As of 1978 Chagall made glass-stained windows for the church St. Stephan in Mainz, nine were executed during the artist's lifetime. After his death on 28 March, 1985 the remaining windows were executed by his students.
377
Marc Chagall
Le peintre dans son atelier, 1976.
Tempera
Estimate:
€ 100,000 / $ 110,000 Sold:
€ 134,200 / $ 147,620 (incl. surcharge)