Aristide Maillol (1861-1944)
HE JOHN W. KLUGE MORVEN COLLECTION After graduating from Columbia University, John W. Kluge became engaged in an increasing number of successful enterprises. In this way he acquired the means to pursue a lifestyle that may be characterized as representing the epitome of eclecticism, a description which also fits each of his many activities: business, friends, travel and especially art collecting, which includes items ranging from Greek and Egyptian antiquities to sculptures by Henry Moore, and such diverse categories such as Australian Aboriginal Art and furniture from Baroque to Biedermeier. His collection of paintings similarly represent diverse ages, styles and origin. Those who know John Kluge well never cease to marvel at his ability to accomplish so much, so well, so quickly. The intellectual itinerary of his mind dictates daily agendas far into the future that reflect an insatiable Jeffersonian curiosity to explore and utilize every opportunity that appears in his daily life. As a result John has participated to the utmost within the full spectrum of what life has to offer; the satisfaction of success in business, the exhilarating nature of collecting art, and the contentment that comes from his munificent benefactions in carefully chosen areas, bringing joy and opportunity to literally thousands of appreciative beneficiaries of his philanthropy. I too have benefited enormously from our ever-ripening friendship of more than fifty years. It has resulted in a profound enhancement of my life. Ralph Carpenter International Representative Christie's Property from the John W. Kluge Morven Collection Images of the Kluge home. Barcodes 23667778 23667778A
Aristide Maillol (1861-1944)

L'Action enchaînée

細節
Aristide Maillol (1861-1944)
L'Action enchaînée
signed with monogram 'AM' (on the top of the base); stamped with foundry mark 'Georges Rudier, Fondeur, Paris' (on the back of the base)
bronze with brown patina
height: 84¾ in. (215 cm.)
Conceived in 1905 and cast at a later date
來源
Galerie Dina Vierny, Paris.
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 9 November 1990.
出版
J. Rewald, Maillol, New York, 1939, p. 166 (another cast illustrated, pp. 78 and 79).
W. George, Aristide Maillol et l'âme de la sculpture, Neuchâtel, 1977, p. 245 (another cast illustrated in color, p. 120).
B. Lorquin, Maillol, London, 1995, p. 197 (another cast illustrated in color, p. 54).

拍品專文

Dina Vierny has confirmed the authenticity of this sculpture.


John Rewald, the great writer on Impressionism and the author of the first monograph in English on Maillol, has called L'Action enchaînée one of the sculptor's "greatest works...the noble bearing and the proud attitude of this statue are a symbol of triumph over every obstacle. The naked figure, bending forward with arms tied behind her back, appears strong enough to crush by the sheer radiance of her joy the forces which shackle liberty" (in op. cit., p. 16).


The dynamism, power and strength of this figure represent both an inspired and successful realization of the commission for which Maillol executed it, and Maillol's own driving ambition to establish a reputation as a sculptor of monumental public works. In 1903 a committee led by the writer Octave Mirbeau rejected Maillol when choosing a sculptor for a monument to the novelist Emile Zola--it was a bitter blow to the sculptor. Mirbeau had dissented in his favor, and fortunately was on another committee two years later, with Georges Clemenceau, Gustave Geffroy and Anatole France, seeking a sculptor to create a monument dedicated to Louis-Auguste Blanqui (1805-1881) on the centennial of his birth. Blanqui, a lifetime revolutionary and a tireless advocate of republican rights in the face of tyranny, had spent 36 years in prison on various charges. Rodin had suggested Camille Claudel for the project, but she was already showing symptoms of the mental illness that would end her career. Maillol's conception based on a large female figure impressed Clemenceau, and the sculptor received an advance of seven thousand francs to undertake L'Action enchaînée, although he ended up having to cover much of the cost out of his own pocket.

Maillol worked quickly on his sculpture in his Banyuls studio and completed several studies within ten days. The final model was ready by the end of the year. In contrast to the 19th century conception of the heroic, but weak and suffering female allegorical figure, Maillol's version is robust and Amazonian. Indeed, its sense of movement is unique within Maillol's oeuvre. Bertrand Lorquin has observed, "A striking image of a figure being forcibly restrained, it substitutes anger and repressed rebelliousness for the characteristic contemplative serenity we usually associate with Maillol. Everything in this sculpture rests on the contrast between massive weight and lightness; the impression one gets is that the sculptor struggled to transform the power of its movement into a gesture at once flowing and fettered" (in op. cit., pp. 56, 58-59).

The monumental version was installed in Puget-Théniers, Blanqui's birthplace, in October 1908, although contemporary public officials, mindful of Blanqui's still controversial reputation, chose to ignore the event. A bronze cast from same edition as the present work was included in Dina Vierny's donation to the French state, and in 1964 was installed together with seventeen other important Maillol sculptures near the Carrousel in the Jardin des Tuileries.