Henri Matisse (1869-1954)
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Henri Matisse (1869-1954)

Sirène

Details
Henri Matisse (1869-1954)
Sirène
signed, titled and dated 'Sirène H. Matisse en 49' (lower left)
charcoal on paper
22 x 14 7/8in.(56 x 37.9cm.)
Drawn in 1949
Provenance
Galerie Bonnier, Geneva.
James Kirkman Inc., London.
Special notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price plus buyer's premium.

Lot Essay

The authenticity of this work has been kindly confirmed by Wanda de Guébriant in a fax dated Paris, le 15 mai 2001.

'I loosen with my hands all women's hair
Day wears the colour that my hands give it
A sigh breathed in my room sets sails swelling
And my gaze at tomorrow is an enduring dream

Every flower in its nakedness is like those captives
Whose sheer beauty makes one's fingers tremble
I wait I see I wonder and the drifting sky
Is clear before me like a garment shed

I explain with no words the circkling steps
I explain the bare footprint that the wind dissolves
I explain with no mystery a moment of this world
I explain the sun on an imagined shoulder

I explain a black pattern against the open window
I explain the birds the trees the seasons
I explain the mute happiness of green plants
I explain the dwelt-in silence of houses

I explain endlessly shadow and transparency
I explain the touch of women and their brightness
I explain a firmament of objects through their differences
I explain the relation between the things that are here

I explain the fragrance of transitory forms
I explain what makes the white paper sing
I explain what makes a leaf light
And how branches are slower-moving arms

I render rightful tribute to the light
Steadfast amidst the miseries of our time
I paint the hope of our eyes so that Henri Matisse
May tell the future what man expects of it'.

(L. Aragon, 'Matisse Speaks', 1947, translated by J. Stewart and quoted in Henri Matisse - a novel II, London 1971, p. 83)

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