Lot 3205* - A211 Art Impressionniste & Moderne - vendredi, 29. novembre 2024, 17h00
PAUL SIGNAC
Signed and entitled verso on the stretcher: P. Signac Port-en-Bessin.
Provenance:
- With Galerie Goldschmidt, Frankfurt, purchased directly from the artist in 1921.
- Private collection in Frankfurt, purchased from the above gallery before 1932 and in the family for three generations.
Literature:
Signac’s painting “Port-en-Bessin. Brick” reflects his early admiration for the Impressionists, especially Claude Monet, who grew up in Normandy and painted the coast there in numerous series. In 1883, Signac visited an exhibition of Monet’s painting series from Varengeville and Pourville in the Paris gallery Durand-Ruel et Cie. This experience clearly influenced Signac’s own painting style. In this early work, Signac’s intensive engagement with the Impressionist technique, the free and flowing brushstroke, is clearly visible. At the same time, however, the work also indicates the further development of his own pictorial language, which is characterized by a kaleidoscopic arrangement of colors and striking, staccato-like brushstrokes, already seen in the reflection of the ship on the surface of the water in this painting.
The year 1884 represents a decisive turning point in the development of Signac’s artistic style. In July, he took part in the first Salon des Artistes Indépendants, where he met his future companions in Neo-Impressionism for the first time: Georges Seurat and Henri-Edmond Cross. As “Port-en-Bessin. Brick” shows, Signac had already begun to develop his own artistic vision at this time. As Signac expert and curator Marina Ferretti aptly notes: “His first works show two characteristics that were to define his work: a clear preference for frontal, geometric compositions with little perspectival depth and a particular love of color.” (Signac, exh. cat., Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2001, p. 85)
PAUL SIGNAC
CHF 80 000 / 140 000 | (€ 82 470 / 144 330)
Vendu pour CHF 218 750 (frais inclus)
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