Details
Pierre Bonnard (1867-1947)

Cabanons au Cannet

signed lower left Bonnard, oil on canvas
27 x 37in. (68.5 x 94cm.)

Painted in 1933
Provenance
Bernheim-Jeune, Paris (11260; ph. 8368), by whom bought from the Artist in Nov. 1937
Henri Sorreson and Sejersted Bodtker, Oslo, bought from Bernheim-Jeune Ragnar Moltzau, Oslo
Marlborough Fine Art, London, from whom bought by Mrs Kodicek in 1961
Literature
J. R. H. Dauberville, Bonnard catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre peint, vol. III, 1920-1939, no. 1506 (illustrated p. 399)
Exhibited
Paris, Bernheim-Jeune, Bonnard, June 1933, no. 5
Pittsburgh, Carnegie Institute, International Exhibition, 1934, no. 204
Oslo, Kunstnerner Hus, Pierre Bonnard, Jan. 1939, no. 67
Oslo, Kunstnerner Hus, Art Français, Nov. 1946, no. 36
London, Marlborough Fine Art, French Landscapes, Oct.-Dec. 1961, no. 2

Lot Essay

During Bonnard's first trip to the Midi in 1910, the southern landscape inspired and attracted him so much that he subsequently returned there every year. Eventually he purchased a house called "Le Bosquet", situated on top of a hill at Le Cannet, overlooking the bay of Cannes. Having settled there, he took great pleasure in painting the area's gentle layers of landscape, nestling in the hillsides with their rich and deep colours. He painted numerous landscapes of the area portraying the sensations of nature's rich and glowing colours. During the 1920s he drew constantly because he was concerned that the temptations of colour would dominate compositional criteria. By the 1930s, the compositions of his landscape pictures became structured but simplified and the colours became even brighter while he remained faithful to his sensation of nature. Felix Fénéon, who once spent time with the painter in the south, described how he had watched Bonnard work on his landscape paintings. 'With four thumb-tacks he had pinned a canvas, lightly tinted with Ocher, to the dining-room wall. During the first few days he would glance from time to time, as he painted, at a sketch on a piece of paper twice the size of one's hand, on which he had made notes in oil, pencil and ink of the dominant colours of each little section of the motif. At first I could not identify the subject. Did I have before me a landscape or a seascape? On the eighth day, I was astonished to be able to recognise a landscape. From that time on Bonnard no longer referred to his sketch. He would step back to judge the effect of the juxtaposed tones; occasionally he would place a dab of colour with his finger, then another next to the first. On about the fifteenth day, I asked him how long he thought it would take him to finish his landscape. Bonnard replied: "I finish it this morning".' (J. Rewald, Pierre Bonnard, New York, 1948, p. 51).

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