Armand Seguin (1869-1903)
On occasion, Christie's has a direct financial int… 显示更多 佩吉及大卫‧洛克菲勒夫妇珍藏
阿尔曼德·塞甘 (1869-1903)

《生活之乐》

细节
阿尔曼德·塞甘 (1869-1903)
《生活之乐》
签名:a. Seguin-(左屏中下)
油彩 画布 裱于画板
每屏(连框):62 7/8 x 25 1/4 吋(159.8 x 64.1公分),共4屏
(4)约1892年至1893年作
来源
巴黎亨利·巴德鲁
纽约赫希尔阿德勒画廊(1959年购自上述收藏)
已故藏家于1960年4月购自上述收藏
出版
《Art Quarterly》,1959年秋(插图)
P. Selz〈Art Nouveau: An International Movement〉《Art in America》,第48期,1960年夏,第83页,编号2(左册两条屏彩色插图)
J.M. Jacobus, Jr〈Art Nouveau in New York〉《Burlington Magazine》,第102期,1960年9月,第395页,编号690(插图,图4)
H. Kramer〈The Erotic Style: Reflections on the Exhibition of ‘Art Nouveau’〉《Arts Magazine》,第34期,1960年9月,第22页,编号10(插图)
W. Jaworska著《Paul Gauguin et l’école de Pont-Aven》,纳沙泰尔,1971年,第146页(左册两屏条彩色插图,第144页)
R.S. Field, C.L. Strauss及 S.J. Wagstaff, Jr著「The Prints of Armand Séguin: 1869-1903」展览目录,戴维斯艺术中心,韦斯利大学,米德尔顿,康涅狄格州,1980年,第7,12,69及73页,编号6
M. Potter等著《The David and Peggy Rockefeller Collection: European Works of Art》,第1册,纽约,1984年,第203,206及345页,编号66(彩色插图,第204至205页;约1894年作,来源有误)
C. Boyle-Turner著「The Prints of the Pont-Aven Group—Gauguin and his Circle in Brittany」展览目录,菲利普美术馆,华盛顿特区,1986年,第88页(插图,图16)
C. Puget著「Armand Seguin」展览目录,阿旺桥博物馆,1989年,第10至11页(彩色插图;作品名称《Les plaisirs de la vie》)
G. Groom著「Beyond the Easel: Decorative Painting by Bonnard, Vuillard, Denis and Roussel, 1890-1930」展览目录,艺术博物馆,芝加哥,2001年,第62页(插图,图2)
S. Barrows〈Nineteenth-Century Cafés: Arenas of Everyday Life〉「Pleasures of Paris: Daumier to Picasso」展览目录,美术博物馆,波士顿,2005年,第25页(插图,第23页)
展览
1959年7月至8月 「Selections from the Collection of Hirschl and Adler Galleries」展览 吉尔德会馆 东汉普顿 第27页,编号40(彩色插图,第26页;来源有误)
1960年6月至1961年5月 「Art Nouveau」展览 现代艺术博物馆 纽约;卡内基美术馆 匹兹堡;郡立美术馆 洛杉矶及巴尔的摩美术馆 第58及181页,编号249(左册两条屏插图,第59页;来源有误)
1984年3月至1985年1月 「The Folding Image: Screens by Western Artists of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries」展览 美术馆 耶鲁大学 纽黑文及国家画廊 华盛顿特区 第141至142页(插图,第140页,图5.1;再次插图,第141页,图5.2)
注意事项
On occasion, Christie's has a direct financial interest in the outcome of the sale of certain lots consigned for sale. This will usually be where it has guaranteed to the Seller that whatever the outcome of the auction, the Seller will receive a minimum sale price for the work. This is known as a minimum price guarantee. This is a lot where Christie’s holds a direct financial guarantee interest.

荣誉呈献

General Enquiries
General Enquiries

拍品专文

The four canvases of Les délices de la vie, thematically conceived, mounted, and displayed as four adjoining panels in a folding screen, comprise Armand Seguin’s largest and most ambitious work of art. He was, to sustain himself, mainly a print-maker and illustrator; his painted oeuvre is consequently small in number, amounting to fewer than a score of pictures as listed in Richard Field’s compilation, and not quite as many watercolors and drawings (exh. cat., op. cit., 1980, pp. 69-70). Those who knew Seguin, most notably Gauguin, commended his work for the potential it appeared to hold for the future, only partly realized in the end, which came all too soon. Seguin fell victim to tuberculosis at the age of 34.
Breton born and bred, Seguin arrived in Paris to study at the École des Arts Décoratifs, but attended classes only briefly. He was otherwise self-taught, picking up what useful lessons he might find in looking at the art of his contemporaries and working alongside them. The Groupe Impressionniste et Synthétiste exhibition at the Café Volpini in Paris, 1889, was a revelation for the aspiring 20-year-old artist. “I was captivated by the paintings of Gauguin, Bernard, Filiger and Laval, so clear-cut, affirmative and beautiful,” Seguin wrote in his 1903 memoir. “I still feel joy at the memory” (quoted in ibid., p. 8).
Seguin became a convert to the synthétiste style, but the timing of his visits to Pont-Aven, Gauguin’s accustomed base in Brittany, failed to coincide with the master’s stays there. During this period when back in Paris, Seguin moved among—without actually joining—a group of young painters who were taking classes at the progressive Académie Julian and had also become fervent admirers of Gauguin, with whom they had occasional contact. Seguin still did not cross paths with his exemplar. The two men did not meet until 1894, following Gauguin’s return from his first stay in Tahiti.
As transmitted through the work of Seguin’s closest friends at the Académie Julian—Verkade, Ibels, Bernard, and Sérusier—synthétisme nonetheless became the key stylistic catalyst in Les délices da la vie. In 1888 Sérusier received on-the-spot guidance from Gauguin when painting a landscape of the Aven river, a small panel that seemed to contain the future of modern art, which his excited fellows back in Paris called Le Talisman. They named their group Les Nabis—“The Prophets”. Seguin attended their exhibitions at the small gallery Le Barc de Boutteville, but did not contribute work of this own, until he was given his first and only lifetime solo exhibition there in 1895.
Maurice Denis, the most articulate theorist among the Nabis, famously proclaimed “a painting is essentially a flat surface covered with colors in a certain order” (Definition of Neotraditionism, 1890). This principle became the chief impetus for the large decorative murals that Denis, Bonnard, and Vuillard painted during the early 1890s. Bonnard made his debut at the Salon des Indépendants in the spring of 1891 with the four panels of Femmes dans un jardin, which were shown again later that year at Le Barc de Boutteville. Well-received by the critics, Bonnard’s ensemble piece surely attracted Seguin’s notice, and may have inspired him to emulate this decorative manner in his own similarly-sized, thematically related series. Seguin set aside his instinctive inclination to treat subjects related to his own native Breton roots, in a primitivist Gauguinesque mode, to attend to this important project.
Seguin painted Les délices de la vie during 1892-1893 (as dated in exh. cat., op. cit., 1980). He composed his subject as an allegory of the pleasurable cosmopolitan pursuits available to a man of means in belle époque Paris. The four panels depict café-concert and dancehall settings, where a hedonist may enjoy (from left to right): drink (with a game of snooker on the side), music and dancing, a fine meal, and finally—with the entrance of an amply-bosomed young lady bearing a platter of aphrodisiac oysters—the anticipation of carnal delight.
A woman as muse presides over each scene—a waitress, a pianist, the diner’s wife, and a courtesan. As a foil to these bourgeois and demi-monde types, Seguin inserted into the dinner scene an elderly, working-class pipe-smoker, a vanitas reminder of mutable fortune and certain mortality. A range of tones derived from the color of “la fée verte”—addictive and hallucinatory absinthe—dominates the panels, which the artist connected formally through an assortment of repeated, echoing motifs, as well as lines and shapes that traverse the frames, running from one panel into the next.
Seguin, in the company of his friend the Irish painter Roderic O’Conor, finally caught up with Gauguin in the spring of 1894, when the three artists happened to be staying in Pont-Aven as guests in neighboring hotels. Gauguin enjoyed the adulation of admiring young acolytes, and brought them along while visiting his old haunts in the area. His entourage at the fishing port of Concarneau on 23 May included his dark-skinned mistress, Annah La Javanaise, her monkey Taoa, Seguin, O'Conor, and a third painter, Emile Jourdain, each of whom had their girlfriends with them.
While this strange-looking group was promenading along the quay, some boys began to harass them, hurling insults and then stones. Seguin caught one of the offenders by his ear, at which point the boy's father ran up and punched the artist, who to escape further punishment leapt off the pier into the cold waters below. Gauguin intervened and felled the man with a single blow. Some of the fellow’s comrades suddenly appeared and a wild melee ensued. A kick from a man’s heavy wooden clog shattered Gauguin’s right shin; he was nearly unconscious when police arrived. Seguin received no worse than the initial punch and his dunking. Even the ladies were roughed up, but were spared worse when some townswomen came to their rescue.
While convalescing well into the summer, Gauguin resorted to large quantities of alcohol and morphine to dull the severe pain in his leg. He worked at printmaking in his room, with Seguin and O'Conor—both of whom were accomplished engravers—providing helpful and stimulating company. Gauguin soon came to consider Seguin his pupil. He helped to arrange his protégé’s solo exhibition at Le Barc de Boutteville in February 1895. “Seguin above all else, is a thinker,” Gauguin wrote in his preface to the catalogue. “By this I certainly do not mean he is a literary artist;—he does not paint just what he sees, but what comes from his thoughts, and this he does through an innovative harmony of lines” (quoted in Post-Impressionism, exh. cat., Royal Academy of Arts, London, 1979, p. 127).
Gauguin tried to persuade Seguin and O’Conor to join him for his imminent—and this time permanent—return to Tahiti. By then fully aware of how domineering the master’s personality could be, neither artist accepted the invitation. Gauguin and Seguin both died in 1903, within a few months of each other, but half a world apart.

更多来自 佩吉及大卫‧洛克菲勒夫妇珍藏:十九及二十世纪(晚间拍卖)

查看全部
查看全部