FERNAND KHNOPFF (BELGIAN, 1858-1921)
FERNAND KHNOPFF (BELGIAN, 1858-1921)
FERNAND KHNOPFF (BELGIAN, 1858-1921)
FERNAND KHNOPFF (BELGIAN, 1858-1921)
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Property from a California Collection
FERNAND KHNOPFF (BELGIAN, 1858-1921)

Étude de nu

Details
FERNAND KHNOPFF (BELGIAN, 1858-1921)
Étude de nu
signed 'FERNAND/KHNOPFF' (lower left)
pencil and crayon on paper
12 ¾ x 7 ¼ in. (32.4 x 18.4 cm.)
Executed circa 1912.
Provenance
Emile Langui (1903-1980) and Stéphy Langui, Brussels, in 1979.
CDC Arts, Antwerp.
Private collection, acquired directly from the above, 1997.
Their sale; Sotheby's, New York, 5 November 2009, lot 185.
Acquired at the above sale by the present owner.
Literature
R. L. Deleroy, C De Croës, an G. Ollinger-Zinque, Fernand Khnopff, Brussels, 1979, pp. 375-376, no. 511, illustrated with the image inverted.
P. de Vijlder, 'Le nu dans l’art belge de Navez à Magritte: une approche iconographique,' Le Nu dans l’Art Moderne belge, exh. cat. Brussels, 1981, pp. 50-51, fig. 34.
Exhibited
Knokke-Heist, Casino Knokke, Le Symbolisme en Belgique, 23 June-1 September 1974, p. 80, no. 40, illustrated, as Nu.
Los Angeles, J. Paul Getty Museum, on short-term loan for the duration of Gustav Klimt: the Magic of Line, 3 July-23 September 2012.
Sale room notice
Please see additional provenance, literature and exhibition information on our website.

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Laura H. Mathis
Laura H. Mathis VP, Specialist, Head of Sale

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Lot Essay

The vast majority of Fernand Khnopff's work showcases his talent as a draftsman and his small-scale works on paper are among the most celebrated in his oeuvre. The subtle nuances of line and color on paper endow Étude de nu with a languid and ephemeral quality, perfectly suited to the femme fatale it depicts. Although she bares the characteristic traits of one of Khnopff's archetypal heroines - flame-haired, aloof and supremely elegant - the provocatively posed figure has a forthright sexuality that marks her out as a somewhat sinister seductress.
As a key figure of the Symbolist Movement in Europe, Khnopff transformed the Realist genre far beyond its descriptive powers, creating symbolic images portraying his private world, his memories and his obsessions. The philosophical underpinnings of the movement advocated a reaction against the direct imitation of Nature in favor of a return to the spiritual realm, the world of dreams, allegories and the fantastical. Khnopff's frequent depiction of women as erotically charged mythological beings represent his desire to portray mysticism, emotion and the loss of intellectual control - all characteristics that he aligned with the feminine. Like his images of the fabled Sphinx and Medusa, the seductive figure of Étude de nu is a sharp contrast to the traditional representation of woman as a symbol of virginal innocence, suggesting the darker aspects of femininity and the threat of unchecked sexual desire.
We are grateful to Gisèle Ollinger-Zinque for confirming the authenticity of the present lot.

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