Occasions Dongen

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  1. Copyright Vermeer Auto's © 2021 - All Rights Reserved.
  2. 8. Occasion for Disaster (Part 1 of 4). interior artwork by H. Van Dongen as by Van Dongen 18. Occasion for Disaster (Part 1 of 4) 2. interior artwork by H. Van Dongen as by Van Dongen 27. Occasion for Disaster (Part 1 of 4) 3. interior artwork by H. Van Dongen as by Van Dongen.
  3. Like his contemporary, Amedeo Modigliani, Van Dongen frequently courted controversy with the flagrant eroticism of such paintings as Grand nu (Zita), with the police called on more than one occasion to remove his canvases from Parisian exhibitions on the grounds of obscenity. Indeed, in his review of the 1913 Salon d’Automne, Guillaume Apollinaire remarked that Van Dongen appeared to be making a biannual habit of exhibiting work only to have it swiftly removed from view for the good of the.

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Lot Essay

Van Dongen, Geneva, 1967, p. 216).
Van Dongen was the most sought-after portrait painter of his day. Depictions of young women were his specialty. The more provocative display in clothing styles and the emphasis on heavy make-up that he had described in his garish paintings of demi-mondaines--dancers, artist's models and prostitutes--during the previous decade were now nearly universally chic and indeed de rigueur among the fashionable upper classes. While showing off a low décolletage, the graceful curve of her neck and wrist, her full painted lips, blushing cheeks and long cascading golden brown curls, the sitter in the present painting maintained the wistful and expectant air of an ingénue.
Occasions Dongen
Occasions

If indeed the times had caught up in many ways with Van Dongen's earlier portrayals of the modern woman, then the techniques he had used to paint them were still current and useful. The typically Fauve use of green shadows, used to complement the pinkness of a woman's skin and the red of her lips and cheeks, is observable in this portrait. The young sitter is solemn and has a pensive air that dignifies her presence.

Occasions Done Right In Hurst Tx

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Carpoint Dongen Occasions

Jacques Chalom des Cordes will include this painting in his forthcoming Kees Van Dongen catalogue raisonné being prepared under the sponsorship of the Wildenstein Institute.
During the 1920s, les années folles, Van Dongen declared, 'I passionately love the life of my time, so animated, so feverish. Ah! Life is even more beautiful than painting' (quoted in W.E. Steadman and D. Sutton, Van Dongen, exh. cat., The University of Arizona Art Museum, 1971, p. 46). Van Dongen pursued his love of modern life in the cabarets, restaurants and salons of Paris, and in the seaside resorts where his upper-class clientele took their holidays. 'I love novelty, the unpublished, that which has not been made before' (ibid.). He sought the patronage of the aristocracy and the nouveau riche, was a favorite guest in the salons of Paris, and hosted his own soirées.
Van Dongen's social affinities and connections afforded him an excellent vantage point from which he could observe and chronicle contemporary glamour, fashion and mores. He was alert to all the subtleties of social display and behavior and could cast a sardonic eye on his subjects when he chose to do so. Yet there is little evidence of ambivalence in his treatment of his sitters--he enjoyed the spectacle and moved easily within this world, and largely identified with it. His view of those fabled years between the wars is all the more valuable because he was genuinely a participant in the passing parade. He did not seek or play the roles of the detached moralist or critic; he chose instead to let his sitters and subjects speak for this lifestyle and themselves. Louis Chaumeil called Van Dongen 'le roi et peintre de son temps' (in Van Dongen, Geneva, 1967, p. 216).
Van Dongen was the most sought-after portrait painter of his day. Depictions of young women were his specialty. The more provocative display in clothing styles and the emphasis on heavy make-up that he had described in his garish paintings of demi-mondaines--dancers, artist's models and prostitutes--during the previous decade were now nearly universally chic and indeed de rigueur among the fashionable upper classes. While showing off a low décolletage, the graceful curve of her neck and wrist, her full painted lips, blushing cheeks and long cascading golden brown curls, the sitter in the present painting maintained the wistful and expectant air of an ingénue.
If indeed the times had caught up in many ways with Van Dongen's earlier portrayals of the modern woman, then the techniques he had used to paint them were still current and useful. The typically Fauve use of green shadows, used to complement the pinkness of a woman's skin and the red of her lips and cheeks, is observable in this portrait. The young sitter is solemn and has a pensive air that dignifies her presence.

Voogd occasions dongen

If indeed the times had caught up in many ways with Van Dongen's earlier portrayals of the modern woman, then the techniques he had used to paint them were still current and useful. The typically Fauve use of green shadows, used to complement the pinkness of a woman's skin and the red of her lips and cheeks, is observable in this portrait. The young sitter is solemn and has a pensive air that dignifies her presence.

Occasions Done Right In Hurst Tx

'>

Carpoint Dongen Occasions

Jacques Chalom des Cordes will include this painting in his forthcoming Kees Van Dongen catalogue raisonné being prepared under the sponsorship of the Wildenstein Institute.
During the 1920s, les années folles, Van Dongen declared, 'I passionately love the life of my time, so animated, so feverish. Ah! Life is even more beautiful than painting' (quoted in W.E. Steadman and D. Sutton, Van Dongen, exh. cat., The University of Arizona Art Museum, 1971, p. 46). Van Dongen pursued his love of modern life in the cabarets, restaurants and salons of Paris, and in the seaside resorts where his upper-class clientele took their holidays. 'I love novelty, the unpublished, that which has not been made before' (ibid.). He sought the patronage of the aristocracy and the nouveau riche, was a favorite guest in the salons of Paris, and hosted his own soirées.
Van Dongen's social affinities and connections afforded him an excellent vantage point from which he could observe and chronicle contemporary glamour, fashion and mores. He was alert to all the subtleties of social display and behavior and could cast a sardonic eye on his subjects when he chose to do so. Yet there is little evidence of ambivalence in his treatment of his sitters--he enjoyed the spectacle and moved easily within this world, and largely identified with it. His view of those fabled years between the wars is all the more valuable because he was genuinely a participant in the passing parade. He did not seek or play the roles of the detached moralist or critic; he chose instead to let his sitters and subjects speak for this lifestyle and themselves. Louis Chaumeil called Van Dongen 'le roi et peintre de son temps' (in Van Dongen, Geneva, 1967, p. 216).
Van Dongen was the most sought-after portrait painter of his day. Depictions of young women were his specialty. The more provocative display in clothing styles and the emphasis on heavy make-up that he had described in his garish paintings of demi-mondaines--dancers, artist's models and prostitutes--during the previous decade were now nearly universally chic and indeed de rigueur among the fashionable upper classes. While showing off a low décolletage, the graceful curve of her neck and wrist, her full painted lips, blushing cheeks and long cascading golden brown curls, the sitter in the present painting maintained the wistful and expectant air of an ingénue.
If indeed the times had caught up in many ways with Van Dongen's earlier portrayals of the modern woman, then the techniques he had used to paint them were still current and useful. The typically Fauve use of green shadows, used to complement the pinkness of a woman's skin and the red of her lips and cheeks, is observable in this portrait. The young sitter is solemn and has a pensive air that dignifies her presence.

Occasions Dongeng

The Dutch painter Cornelis Theodorus Maria van Dongen, known as Kees van Dongen, attended drawing classes at the Akademie voor Beeldende Kunsten in Rotterdam and worked at the Rotterdamsche Nieuwsblad before emigrating to Paris in 1897. On arriving in the French capital, Van Dongen met the critic Félix Fénéon and the group of artists associated with La Revue Blanche, which Fénéon directed. He produced politically and socially committed illustrations for magazines such as L’Assiette au beurre in 1901, many of them on the theme of prostitution.
Although dark tones were initially predominant in his work owing to the influence of his Dutch background and his admiration for Rembrandt, his connection with Fauvism soon led him to broaden his palette. Indeed, his contacts with the members of this movement became effective in 1906, and he exhibited with them until 1912. During this time he was also in contact with the German Expressionists, with whom he showed his work in 1908, after receiving an invitation from the Die Brücke group through Max Pechstein.
Between 1910 and 1913 Van Dongen made several trips to Spain, Morocco and Egypt, during which he concentrated on executing a series of landscapes. His attraction for the exoticism of these places was also reflected in his illustrations for Dr Mardrus’s edition of the Arabian Nights, published in Paris in 1918. He later returned to his favourite subject matter, the human figure, and focused on sensuous depictions of women. The Marquise Casati and her friend Jasmy Jacob introduced him to the so-called beau monde of Paris. His commissions multiplied and he became the portraitist of famous people, for whom he also organised sumptuous parties and receptions on many occasions.

Occasions Dongen Lion Van Loon

Works





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