HENRI MANGUIN (1874-1949)

Details
HENRI MANGUIN (1874-1949)

Jeanne à l'ombrelle, Cavalière

stamped with signature lower right Manguin--oil on canvas
36¼ x 28¾ in. (92 x 73 cm.)

Painted spring-summer, 1906
Provenance
Madame Henri Manguin, Saint-Tropez (1949)
Jack Josey, Houston (1971)
Literature
L. and C. Manguin, Henri Manguin, Catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre peint, Neuchâtel, 1980, no. 210 (illustrated, p. 106)
Exhibited
Albi, Musée Toulouse-Lautrec, Exposition Henri Manguin, April-May, 1957, no. 23
Avignon, Musée Calvet, Manguin, 1959, no. 10
Paris, Galerie de Paris, Manguin, 1964, no. 19
Saint-Denis, Musée d'Art et d'Histoire, Les peintres et la nature en France depuis l'Impressionisme, 1965, no. 13
London, Arthur Tooth & Sons Ltd., Henri Manguin, 1966, no. 3 (illustrated)
Recklinghausen, Städtische Kunsthalle, Zauber des Lichtes, 1967, no. 102 (illustrated)

Lot Essay

Manguin was a student at Gustave Moreau's atelier with Charles Camoin, Albert Marquet, Henri Matisse and Jean Puy, artists whose careers and achievements remained closely intertwined through the Fauve years. These artists usually spent their summers away from Paris on the Mediterranean coast. Manguin prefered the area around Saint- Tropez, where he maintained a close friendship with Paul Signac. The model in this view is the artist's wife Jeanne, whom he met in 1896 and married three years later. This painting is one of two versions which remained in the artist's collection until his death; the second smaller version (L. and C. Manguin, op.cit., no. 211; coll. Kunsthalle, Bielefeld, Germany) was included in the 1990-1991 exhibition The Fauve Landscape, which was seen in Los Angeles, New York and London.