Picasso, Monet and Giacometti, Lead Sotheby's Sale of Impressionist & Modern Art
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, February 5, 2025


Picasso, Monet and Giacometti, Lead Sotheby's Sale of Impressionist & Modern Art
Claude Monet, Route de Giverny en hiver, 1885. Estimate: £3-4 million, Photo: Sotheby's.



LONDON.- Sotheby's forthcoming sale of Impressionist & Modern Art on the evening of Wednesday, June 24, 2009 will be led by rare works by Pablo Picasso, Alberto Giacometti, Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.

Pablo Picasso’s Homme à l’épée, a striking and monumental depiction of a musketeer from the artist’s late oeuvre, will be one of the centre-pieces of the sale with an estimate of £6-8 million. The vividly coloured painting dates from July 1969 and is one of his most important and iconic subjects of this period.

Throughout his career Picasso projected the different sides of his own identity in a number of ways and the musketeer was one of the most celebrated subjects and guises of his latter years. It was a theme which saw him align himself with the iconography so frequently used by great Old Master painters such as Rembrandt and Velázquez and hence merge his own personal history with the cultural heritage of the Western artistic tradition. In Homme à l’épée Picasso depicts a nobleman from the Spanish Golden Age, gaudily dressed and sporting a cloak and big black hat.

Talking about the painting, Helena Newman, Director of the Evening Sale and Vice Chairman of the Impressionist & Modern Art department, Sotheby’s Worldwide, said: “Following the widely acclaimed exhibitions Picasso et les maîtres at the Grand Palais in Paris and more recently Picasso: Challenging the Past at the National Gallery in London – the latter of which closed its doors to the public on June 7 – we’re delighted to be including Homme à l’épée from 1969 as one of the highlights of our forthcoming sale of Impressionist and Modern Art. This powerful, museum-quality painting, which has never before been at auction, comes to the market at a time when the interest in and assessment of Picasso’s late oeuvre has never been stronger.”

Picasso pared down his style in the final years of his career and painted works on a grand scale in bold, spontaneous brushstrokes - Homme à l’épée measures 146 by 114cm - and focuses on the elements of himself that fascinated and preoccupied him. Picasso captured these elements with a contemporary style and his own unique sense of wit. Homme à l’épée starred in the seminal exhibition of the artist’s work at the Palais des Papes in Avignon in 1970 and was selected for the poster advertising the exhibition.

Picasso will also be represented by his monumental nude entitled Nu debout from 1968, estimated at £3-4 million, which has been in the same private collection for over 35 years. This painting belongs to a series of major works that he undertook on the theme of the female nude in the late 1960s. Distinguished by their larger than-life format and stunning display of painterly virtuosity, the figures depicted in this series have drawn comparison to his early masterpiece Demoiselles d'Avignon of 1907.

In this work Picasso takes as his muse and model the woman he loves and who lives with him, Jacqueline, the final love of his life whom he married in 1961. Although she did not pose for this or other works, features such as her almond-shaped eyes and strong nose are clearly distinguishable in Nu debout. The love that Picasso felt for his wife is reflected in the passionate vitality and excitement radiating from the present work. Her monumentality and her frontal pose confronting the viewer convey a universality and eternal presence, identifying Jacqueline as the ultimate feminine representation. The artist’s creative energy at this time - when he was in his late 80s - was remarkable, and the present work is a striking example of the breath-taking flood of invention and fantastic vitality that characterised Picasso's late years.

A group of works by Alberto Giacometti from a private European collection will be a further notable highlight. This group which has a combined low estimate of £4.2 million, is led by Buste de Diego (Aménophis), an iconic sculpture of the artist’s younger brother, estimated at £2-3 million. This work depicts Diego, whose slender head emerges from a voluminous bust, a style typical of many of the portrayals of Diego by his brother after World War II. A further Giacometti work is Diego (Tête au col roulé), estimated at £1–1.5 million and dating from the early 1950s, a painted plaster sculpture that merges his talents as both a painter and a sculptor. Another bronze from the group is an impressive bust of Giacometti’s wife entitled Buste d’Annette VII, which belongs to a series of sculptures characterised by a delicate rendering of Annette’s distinctive features. A slender neck supports a raised head, large eyes, pointed nose and delicate chin. Estimated at £1.2–1.8 million, this work is one of only two casts of Buste d’Annette VII, with the other in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco.

Among a strong group of Impressionist works is a prime example of Claude Monet's winter landscapes, an oil on canvas entitled Route de Giverny en hiver. Dating from 1885 and estimated at £3-4 million, this classic Impressionist scene depicts the snow-covered road leading to the town of Giverny, where the artist lived at the time and where he painted some of his most celebrated works. Inspired by heavy snowfall in 1885, Monet immediately started painting the newly transformed landscape and the present work is a quintessential example of his rendering of the differing effects of light on snow.

A rare painting by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec from circa 1888 is inspired by the celebrated Cirque Fernando in Montmartre, a favourite haunt of the artist and his contemporaries. The painting - entitled Au cirque: dans les coulisses - is estimated at £2-3 million. Toulouse-Lautrec was known for capturing scenes from popular culture and the night life of turn-of-the-century Paris. As such he frequented the circus and these visits inspired a number of paintings and drawings around this time; unlike many of these works however, Au cirque: dans les coulisses focuses on a small group off-stage rather than capturing the full colourful performance. The grisaille technique, with contrasts between the light and dark grey tones, creates a sense of energy that adds to the dynamism of this classic Toulouse-Lautrec painting.

Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s oil on canvas Nature morte, fleurs et fruits, estimated at £1.8–2.5 million, is a vivid depiction of gladioli and lilies bursting from their vase and surrounded by succulent fruit. The painting dates from the prime of Renoir’s career in the late 1880s and exemplifies the Impressionist techniques of rendering light and shadow that Renoir and Monet introduced at Impressionist group exhibitions in Paris. The distinctive majolica vase reappears in the artist’s celebrated painting Jeunes filles au piano of 1892 which is today in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

The sale will also include a rare view of Constantinople by Paul Signac of 1907, a unique life-size stone carving by Barbara Hepworth and notable works by Joan Miró and René Magritte.





Sotheby's | Pablo Picasso | Alberto Giacometti | Claude Monet | Pierre-Auguste Renoir | Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec | Paul Signac |





Today's News

June 10, 2009

Art Basel Shows Works of Art by 2,500 Artists at World's Premier International Art Fair

Looking at Music: Side 2 Explores the Creative Exchange Between Musicians and Artists in NYC

Picasso Drawings Valued at $9.8 Million and $14 Million Stolen from Paris Museum

Sotheby's London Contemporary Art Evening Sale to Present Three Rare Andy Warhol Paintings

Montenegro Pavilion at Palazzo Zorzi Shows Dado: The Zorzi Elegies

Saint Louis Art Museum Transforms Gallery into a Painting Conservation Lab for Exhibition

Fundación Telefónica Presents Gerhard Richter's Overpainted Photographs

National Museums Liverpool Allows You to Ask the Curator: Discover What Goes on Behind the Scenes

Picasso, Monet and Giacometti, Lead Sotheby's Sale of Impressionist & Modern Art

McNay Art Museum Showcases Art Collection of 1950s Maverick Tom Slick: International Art Collector

Three Contemporary Exhibitions Open at the New Orleans Museum of Art

Renowned Dutch Photographers Observe New York in "Dutch Seen: New York Rediscovered"

Bellevue Arts Museum Announces a Retrospective of One of America's Most Innovative Ceramic Sculptors Robert Sperry

Lawrence Passmore Joins Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts as Director of Foundation Relations

Whistler: The Gentle Art of Making Etchings to Open at Lady Lever Art Gallery

Ryan Trecartin and Lizzie Fitch Outdoor Installation at the Rose Art Museum

National Gallery Paintings in Superb Detail on your iPhone

Detroit Institute of Arts Opens New Wayne and Joan Webber Education Wing

Saint Louis Art Museum, Washington University Announce Freund Fellows

Monterey Museum of Art Debuts New Contest Where Oh Where in Monterey?




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful