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Lot 149
  • 149

Kees van Dongen

Estimate
800,000 - 1,200,000 USD
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Description

  • Kees van Dongen
  • Les Amies
  • Signed van Dongen (upper right); title, signed and dated Amies/van Dongen/5 rue Juliette Lamber Paris/XXII on the reverse
  • Oil on canvas
  • 29 1/8 by 23 1/4 in.
  • 74 by 59 cm

Provenance

L. Schames, Berlin
Private Collection
Sale: Christie’s, London, June 23, 1986, lot 47
Sale: Loudmer, Paris, April 9, 1989, lot 80
Private Collection (acquired at the above sale)

Exhibited

Paris, Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Van Dongen, Le Peintre, 1990

Literature

Edmond des Courières, Van Dongen, Paris, 1925, illustrated pl. 71

Catalogue Note

In 1918, van Dongen began a long-term relationship with Léo Jacob, also known as Jasmy La Dogaresse, an ambitious woman who helped to launch his career in a new direction due to her connections in the Parisian fashion circles.  In 1922 the couple moved to a new residence in rue Juliette Lamber, where van Dongen held exhibitions and Jasmy hosted extravagant parties attended by influential members of high society.  Writing about this period of van Dongen's career, that became known as the 'Folle Epoque', Denys Sutton commented: "During the 1920s, Van Dongen became one of the most talked of figures in the French art world and it is only necessary to run through the volume of press cuttings belonging to [his daughter] to be aware of the fact that his name was news.  He was a frequent visitor to Deauville, where the smart world gathered, and to the cabarets and restaurants of Paris. What appealed to him about the années folles were their movement and gaiety.  He once said: 'I passionately love the life of my time so animated, so feverish! Ah! Life is even more beautiful than painting'" (William Steadman and Denys Sutton, Cornelius Theodorus Marie Van Dongen (exhibition catalogue), Tucson, Arizona, 1971, 𝓡p. 46).

The present work is a striking example of the stylistic features which characterized much of van Dongen's art from the 1920s.  During this period, his creative energy was primarily focused on portraiture, depicting members of high society, as well as performers from the cafés and cabarets that he frequented. In this intimate composition, the two nudes are seen against an undefined background with an ornamental fence behind them.  Although depicted in the nude, the women's necklases, earrings and fashionable hairstyles give them an air de l'époque.  The highly expressive green coloration of their skin, reminiscent of van Dongen's earlier Fauve paintings, accentuates the sensual character of the sitters.  With their brightly colored, almond-shaped eyes, so typical of van Dongen's portraiture, looking just away from the viewer, and the slightly Asiatic physiognomy of the woman on the right, Les Amies is veiled in an atmoshpere of exoticism an𝔍d myst🔯ery.