Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1814-1919) and Louis Morel (b. 1887)
Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1814-1919) and Louis Morel (b. 1887)

Danseuse au tambourin I; and Joueur de flte

Details
Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1814-1919) and Louis Morel (b. 1887)
Danseuse au tambourin I; and Joueur de flte
both signed and numbered, the former 'Renoir 15/20' (lower left), the latter 'Renoir 4/20' (lower right); both stamped with the foundry mark 'C Valsuani Cire Perdue' (the former, lower right; the latter, on the underside)
bronze with brown patina
23 x 17 in. (60.3 x 43.8 cm.)
Original plaster versions executed in 1918; these bronze versions cast in 1950 in editions of 20
a pair (2)
Literature
P. Haesaerts, Renoir Sculpteur, New York, 1947, nos. 22 and 24 (terracotta versions illustrated, pls. XLIV, XLV and XLVII).

Lot Essay

In 1918, after the departure of Richard Guino, with whom he had collaborated on roughly 20 sculptures, Renoir engaged the services of the young sculptor Louis Morel. Together they created three terracotta reliefs on Dionysian themes, including the present subject. "It is a moving fact that the very last sculptures of this old man, who was paralyzed and not far from his end, evoked music and dance" (Haesaerts, op. cit., p. 33). As Guino had done before him, Morel modelled the reliefs from drawings by Renoir, whose hands were arthritic and incapable of working in even the most malleable materials. Renoir had planned a further relief depicting a dancing figure wearing a wreath, but became too ill to continue working on it.

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