Paul Gauguin (1848-1903)
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
保罗·高更 (1848-1903)

《海浪》

细节
保罗·高更 (1848-1903)
《海浪》
签名及日期:P Gauguin 88.(左下)
油彩 画布
23 3/4 x 28 5/8 吋(60.2 x 72.6公分)
1888年8月至10月作
来源
艺术家;1891年2月23日,巴黎杜鲁酒店拍卖,拍品编号28
巴黎朱尔斯·查韦斯(购自上述拍卖)
巴黎安布鲁瓦兹·沃那(可能于1897年10月购自上述收藏,直至至少1908年)
巴黎德鲁耶画廊(约1911年)
(可能)巴黎保罗·纪尧姆
巴黎阿尔登·布鲁克斯(于1934年前可能购自上述收藏)
加利福尼亚大索尔菲利帕·布克斯·维尔恩(受赠自上述收藏);1966年5月19日,纽约帕克勃内画廊,拍品编号18
已故藏家购自上述拍卖
出版
J. Huret〈Paul Gauguin devant ses tableaux〉《L’Echo de Paris》,1891年2月23日,第2页
Y. Tugenhold〈Le paysage dans la peinture français〉《Apollo》,1911年7月,第8页(插图;作品名称《Bretagne》)
C. Morice著《Paul Gauguin》,巴黎,1919年(插图)
E. Faure著《 Histoire de I’art—L’art moderne》,巴黎,1921年,第429页(插图)
M. Malingue著《 Gauguin: Le Peinture et son oeuvre》,巴黎,1948年,第34页(插图,图号116;作品名称《Marine en Bretagne》)
J. Leymarie著「Gauguin: Exposition du Centenaire」展览目录,橘园美术馆,巴黎,1949年,第96页
L. van Dovski著《 Paul Gauguin: oder die Flucht von der Zivilisation》,苏黎世,1950年,第342页,编号112(作品名称《Marine en Bretagne》)
D. Sutton〈Notes on Paul Gauguin apropos a Recent Exhibition〉《Burlington Magazine》,第98期,1956年3月,第91页
Y. Thirion〈“L’Influence de l’estampe japonaise dans l’oeuvre de Gauguin〉《 Gazette des Beaux-Arts》,第47期,1956年1月至4月,第105至106页(插图,第103页,图6)
Y. Thirion〈L’Influence de l’estampe japonaise dans l’oeuvre de Gauguin〉, G. Wildenstein编《Gauguin: Sa Vie, son oeuvre》,巴黎,1958年,第105至106页(插图,第103页,图6)
B. Dorival〈Le Peintre dans son siècle〉《Gauguin: Collection Génies et Réalités》,巴黎,1960年,第89页
M. Bodelsen著《 Gauguin’s Ceramics: A Study in the Development of His Art》,伦敦,1964年,第178及220页
G. Wildenstein著《Gauguin》,第1册,巴黎,1964年,第106页,编号286(插图)
D. Sutton著「Gauguin and the Pont-Aven Group」展览目录,序,泰特美术馆,伦敦,1966年,第7及21页
A. Lhote写给G. Frizeau的信,1908年11月11日于J.-F. Moueix重印,〈Un amateur d'art éclairé à Bordeaux: Gabriel Frizeau〉博士论文,波尔多大学,1969年,第269至270及272页
W. Andersen〈Gauguin’s Motifs from Le Pouldu—Preliminary Report〉《Burlington Magazine》,第112期,1970年9月,第619页,编号810(插图,图73)
G.M. Sugana著《 L’Opera completa di Gauguin》,米兰,1972年,第94页,编号118(插图,第93页)
J. Rewald〈Theo van Gogh: Goupil and the Impressionists〉《Gazette des Beaux-Arts》,第81期,1973年1月,第49页
C.F. Ives著《The Great Wave: The Influence of Japanese Woodcuts on French Prints》,纽约,1974年,第100至101页
V. Jirat-Wasiutýnski〈Paul Gauguin in the Context of Symbolism〉,博士论文,普林斯顿大学,1978年,第81至82及410页(插图,插图编号48)
J. Rewald著《 Post-impressionism: From Van Gogh to Gauguin》,纽约,1978年,第179页(插图)
E. Fezzi著《Gauguin: Every Painting I》,纽约,1980年,第72页,编号278
M.Potter等著《The David and Peggy Rockefeller Collection: European Works of Art》,第1册,纽约,1984年 ,第9至10及187至189页,编号62(彩色插图,第188页)
R. Brettell, F. Cachin, C. Frèches-Thory及C. Stuckey著「The Art of Paul Gauguin」展览目录,国家画廊,华盛顿特区, 1988年,第174页
F. Cachin著《Gauguin》,巴黎,1988年,第66至67页(彩色插图,第67页)
K. Berger著《Japonisme in Western Painting: From Wistler to Matisse》,剑桥,1992年,第153页(插图)
R. Smith〈Critic's Notebook: Gauguin and Eakins, Driven but Worlds Apart〉《The New York Times》,2002年9月2日
D, Wildenstein著《Gauguin: A Savage in the Making, Catalogue Raisonné of the Paintings》,第2册,米兰,2002年,第442至443页,编号303(彩色插图,第443页)
D. Gamboni著《Paul Gauguin: The Mysterious Centre of Thought》,伦敦,2014年,第137至138及286页,编号67(彩色插图,第138页)
H. Hakamata及Y. Ikeda编「 Hokusai and Japonisme」展览目录,国立西洋美术馆,东京,2017年,第342页(插图,图3)
展览
1891年2月23日「30 Tableaux de Paul Gauguin」展览 柏索德·瓦拉东画廊 巴黎 编号28(作品名称《La Vague (arc-en-ciel)》)
(可能)1907年3月至4月 米特克画廊 维也纳 编号71(作品编号《On the Coast, Pont-Aven》)
(可能)1907年5月 「Oeuvres de Gauguin」展览 国家沙龙 布达佩斯 编号42(作品名称《At a Rocky Seashore》)
(可能)1907年10月「French Impressionists」展览 马内斯画廊 布拉格 编号122(作品名称《Waterfall》)
1908年4月至5月 「Salon de La Toison d’Or」展览 莫斯科 第55页,编号69(插图;作品名称《Plage rouge》)
(可能)1910年11月至1911年1月 「Manet and the Post-Impressionists」展览 格拉夫顿画廊 伦敦 编号26(作品名称《 Pont-Aven, Bretagne》)
1994年6月至9月 「Masterpieces from the David and Peggy Rockefeller Collection: Manet to Picasso」展览 现代艺术博物馆 纽约 第8,12至13,17,40及80至81页(彩色插图,第41页)
2002年6月至10月 「The Lure of the Exotic: Gauguin in New York Collections」展览 大都会艺术博物馆 纽约 第67及221页,编号41(彩色插图,第67页)
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

Gauguin painted La Vague during his second extended sojourn in Brittany, as he availed himself of the inexpensive hospitality at Marie-Jeanne Gloanec’s pension in Pont-Aven, from late January into October 1888. The artist befriended Captain Yves-Marie Jacob, the head customs official in the town, who directed him to interesting sites along the coast. About eight miles to the southeast, in the small fishing commune of Le Pouldu, Gauguin discovered from a high, steep bluff, where the Portguerrec creek descends to the sea, this motif of massive, black lichen-covered rocks thrusting up through the North Atlantic surf. From a vantage point the artist could access only during low tide, he likely made a sketch or two, for the painting he would soon begin upon his return to Mme Gloanec’s inn. Wildenstein dates La Vague to late August or early September 1888.
“I like living in Brittany; here I find a savage, primitive quality,” Gauguin wrote to his painter friend Claude-Emile Schuffenecker in February 1888. “When my wooden shoes echo on the granite ground, I hear the dull, muted, powerful sound I am looking for in painting” (D. Guérin, ed., Paul Gauguin: The Writings of a Savage, New York, 1978, p. 23). After a slow start, Gauguin completed during the first seven months of his stay some three dozen landscapes, figure paintings, and still-lifes. These works display only hints, however, of the stylistic advances Gauguin had made during his recent stay in Martinique. He seemed hesitant to experiment, reverting instead to the Impressionist manner of his earlier work.
The catalyst for change came in the arrival of Emile Bernard, then barely twenty, who had been painting along the northern coast of Brittany and travelled to Pont-Aven at the beginning of August while on holiday with his mother and sister. Van Gogh had recommended Bernard to Gauguin; the two artists immediately hit it off. As they exchanged ideas, both men realized they were similarly seeking a new kind of expression in modern painting. “It took his meeting with Emile Bernard to put some kind of order, although yet a rather obscure one, into [Gauguin’s] mind,” John Rewald wrote. “His more or less complete assimilation of Bernard’s theories and his efforts to harmonize them with his own still vague inclinations are revealed in the artistic tenets which Gauguin now began to expound” (op. cit., 1978, p. 178).
Gauguin was determined to take a decisive turn in his art—he would henceforth pursue a deeply subjective, anti-naturalist, primitivist, and visionary track, in a conception he and Bernard called synthétiste. “My latest things are coming along well and I think you’ll find…the affirmation of my earlier teachings,” Gauguin wrote to Schuffenecker on 14 August. He offered this advice: “Don’t copy nature too closely. Art is an abstraction; as you dream amid nature, extrapolate art from it and concentrate on what you will create as a result ” (D. Guérin, ed., op. cit., 1978, pp. 23-24).
In keeping with these ideas, Gauguin took liberties with the marine motif he had seen in Le Pouldu. Wayne Andersen located and photographed the site (op. cit., 1970). The third rock at upper left is a fiction the artist invented to extend the diagonal effect of the two actual formations. Most astonishing of all is that Gauguin painted the ordinary sand-colored beach a brilliant, utterly unnatural hue of vermilion. His increasingly idiosyncratic sense of color stemmed in part from the brilliant kiln-fired glazes that he applied to his ceramic heads and figures, in which the presence of red appears to animate the artist’s creation of flesh from clay. Gauguin’s vermilion in La Vague evokes the warmly pulsing life-blood in the generative body of maternal earth.
The red beach relates to yet another extraordinary color effect that Gauguin imposed upon this scene. For the auction of his paintings at Drouot, Paris, in February 1891, to raise funds for his imminent departure to the South Seas, Gauguin titled the present painting La Vague (arc-en-ciel). No rainbow, of course, is visible in this picture. Detectable, however, in the surging, foamy surf, is a prismatic phenomenon, in which the water appears to separate the reflected sunlight into its component chromatic wavelengths—pale violet, blue, green, and yellow—which, completed by the vermilion strand, yields a curving, rainbow-like effect along the upper edge and right-hand side of the painting. “Colors exist only in a visible rainbow,” Gauguin wrote in his Notes synthétiques of 1884-1885. “But how right rich nature was in carefully showing them to you next to each other in a deliberate and immutable order, as if each color was born of the other” (D. Guérin, ed., op. cit., 1978, p. 11).
An abiding fascination with Japanese prints surely intensified Gauguin’s affinity for the elemental power and poetic mystery he sensed in the Portguerrec rocks. He likely took the title for his canvas from Hokusai’s color woodcut The Great Wave of Kanagawa, already famous as the emblematic image for the flood-tide of japonisme that had swept through the ranks of vanguard Paris painters, and into mainstream decorative arts as well. The buyer of La Vague in the 1891 Drouot auction was the dealer Jules Chavasse, who was known for his exceptional collection of Japanese prints.
As he had observed in Japanese practice, Gauguin often composed landscapes from elevated and other unusual vantage points, allowing him to dispense with a stabilizing horizon (in contrast to Monet in his Belle-Île Rochers series, 1886), and render the motif close-up, within an unaccustomed, restricted pictorial scope. Instead of gazing into the typically broad expanse of the landscape format, the viewer in La Vague experiences a vertiginous plunge into vertical depth, the psychological effect of which is like peering into the inner recesses of one’s own emotional self.
Apart from attesting to the dating of La Vague to the later weeks of summer 1888, Gauguin’s insertion of two young female bathers, fleeing the incoming wave, may well suggest an undercurrent of sexual innuendo in the painting’s imagery. Noticing a similarity to Gauguin’s ceramic pot, self-portrait heads, and the artist’s use of his caricatured profile in Vache sur la falaise à Porsach, 1888 (Wildenstein, no. 310), Dario Gamboni has likened the twin rocks in La Vague to “two giant heads, their faces turned upward to the sky,” and imagines “the fear caused by this apparition in the two women bathers” (op. cit., 2014, p. 137). Gauguin admired Breton women for their primitive, earth-motherly nature, steeped in magical Celtic legend and lore, while at the same time having his own virile impulses thwarted by the proprieties of their no less traditional, fervently devout Catholic faith.
La Vague was painted between two other notable works that bear witness to Gauguin’s recent stylistic metamorphosis and share his newfound passion for vermilion. In August 1888, the artist presented to his hostess Nature morte, fête Gloanec (Wildenstein, no. 301). The powerful, ground-breaking masterwork of Gauguin’s second stay in Pont-Aven is La vision du sermon (Jacob Wrestling with the Angel), the first symbolist painting, which Gauguin began in mid-August and completed the following month (Wildenstein, no. 308). Space in these works has become radically artificial, flat, and horizonless. The picture plane is tilted steeply toward the viewer, which verticalizes the composition of pictorial elements. The use of red in these pictures neither corresponds to, nor is derived from any observed natural phenomenon. This color is instead intended to project a visionary, revelatory state of awareness and understanding, in which a convulsive, volcanic force from within transfigures material nature into a transcendent, spiritual state.
The symbolist transformation did indeed break over Gauguin like a great wave, transporting him like a castaway to an unfamiliar shore. In two letters to Schuffenecker written a week apart in October 1888, upon the completion of La vision du sermon, the artist stated, “I wished to force myself into doing something other than what I know how to do. I believe this is a change which has not yet borne fruit, but will one day do so…Clearly the path of symbolism is full of dangers, and I have not yet ventured more than the tip of my toe in that direction: but symbolism is fundamental to my nature, and one should always follow one’s temperament...For most I shall be an enigma, but for a few I shall be a poet and sooner or later what is good wins recognition” (quoted in Gauguin, exh. cat., National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1988, pp. 103 and 104).
Following his disastrous attempt to live and work with Van Gogh in Arles during the fall of 1888, Gauguin returned to Paris. In February 1889 the artist travelled to Brittany for this third campaign, which lasted for extended periods spread over the next two years, initially staying in Pont-Aven and thereafter in Le Pouldu, where he painted with Meyer de Haan. It was in Le Pouldu, as Rewald wrote, that “Gauguin came as close to a primitive way of life as he could ever expect to find in France” (op. cit., 1978, p. 267). His next destination would be half a world away—Tahiti in the South Seas.
When La Vague appeared in a Parke-Bernet Galleries, Inc., New York sale in 1966, “Peggy went to look at it in the auction rooms and was very much taken with it,” David Rockefeller recalled. They already owned Gauguin’s famous portrait of Meyer de Haan, painted a year later in Le Pouldu (Wildenstein, no. 317). “Her judgment was confirmed by John Rewald. This was certainly another case where I do not believe I would have bought left to myself, although I have come to appreciate it enormously and am very glad Peggy spotted it” (quoted in exh. cat., op. cit., 1994, p. 81).

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