James Ensor (1860-1949)
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more PROPERTY FROM A EUROPEAN PRIVATE COLLECTION 
James Ensor (1860-1949)

Porcelaines et éventail

Details
James Ensor (1860-1949)
Porcelaines et éventail
signed 'ENSOR.' (lower right); signed and inscribed 'J Ensor Porcelaines et éventail' (on the reverse)
oil on panel
9 3/8 x 13 in. (23.8 x 33 cm.)
Painted in 1938
Provenance
Augusta Boogaerts, Brussels.
Claes-Boogaerts collection, Brussels.
Anonymous sale, Mak van Waay, Amsterdam, 25 April 1966, lot 35.
Acquired by the present owner in the 1970s.
Literature
The artist's handlist (Liber Veritatis), 1929-1941, f. 43ro.
X. Tricot, James Ensor, Catalogue raisonné of the paintings, vol. II, 1902-1941, Antwerp, 1992, no. 777 (illustrated p. 657).
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

'In my parents’ shop I had seen the wavy lines, the serpentine forms of beautiful seashells, the iridescent light of mother-of-pearl, the rich tones of delicate chinoiseries' (quoted in P. Haesaerts, Ensor, London, 1957, p. 37). Ensor'’s passion for the curios in his mother'’s souvenir shop as a young man remained with him throughout his life. The present work would have been painted at rue de Flandres in Ostend, in the house he inherited in 1917 from his uncle, who also ran a souvenir shop. Ensor kept the shop intact downstairs, refusing to run it as a business, and set up an attic studio, a sort of cabinet de
curiosités
, where he was surrounded by fantastical glittery objects, seashells, fans, collections of silk and pieces of Chinese ceramics, a constant source of inspiration.

In the present work Porcelaines et éventail, Ensor lays out various objects, taken from his studio, side by side on a white tablecloth, an arrangement, in iridescent pinks and reds, of a large porcelain coffee pot flanked by an elegant Japanese fan and a small pretty vase of flowers. This composition underlines Ensor'’s life-long fascination with Oriental objets d'’art, an interest he shared with some of the Impressionist and Nabi artists. Ensor employs a light palette in this technically refined painting to create a shiny, sparkling jewel, an irreverent, enchanting vanitas.

This work remained in the collection of Augusta Boogaerts, daughter of an Ostend hotelier, who met Ensor in the late 1880s and would remain his faithful companion up to his death, although they would never marry. La Sirène, as Ensor called her, assisted the artist in selecting and assembling the elements of his still-lifes particularly towards the end of his life. It is highly likely that she composed the present work, and the fact that it entered her own collection either as a gift from the artist during his lifetime or following his death is a testament to the emotional attachment she formed to this charming nature morte.

More from Impressionist and Modern Art Day Sale

View All
View All