Вы находитесь на странице: 1из 3

Sotheby's

Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale


New York | 12 Nov 2018, 07:00 PM | N09930

LOT 51
PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF HARRIET GRIFFIN WHITELAW
GIORGIO MORANDI
1890 - 1964
NATURA MORTA (STILL LIFE)
Signed Morandi (center right); signed Morandi and dated 1939 (on the reverse)
Oil on canvas
17 1/2 by 21 in.
44.4 by 53.3 cm
Painted in 1939.

ESTIMATE 1,000,000-1,500,000 USD


Lot Sold: 1,545,000 USD

PROVENANCE
Nelson A. Rockefeller, New York (acquired by 1964)

Albert Loeb & Jan Krugier, New York


Private Collection, Frankfurt

Galerie Gmurzynska, Cologne

Private Collection

Harriet Griffin Fine Arts, New York

Private Collection, Tokyo

Acquired from the above in 2008

EXHIBITED
Milan, Palazzo Reale & Rome, Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna, Arte italiana del XX secolo da collezioni americane
, 1960, no. 152, illustrated in the catalogue

Cleveland, The Cleveland Museum of Art, Fifty Years of Modern Art, 1916-1966, 1966, no. 72, illustrated in the
catalogue

New York, The Museum of Modern Art, Twentieth-Century Art from The Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller Collection, 1969,
n.n., illustrated in the catalogue

Madrid, Fundacion Caja de Pensiones, Giorgio Morandi 1890-1964, 1984-85, no. 23, illustrated in color in the
catalogue

LITERATURE
Lamberto Vitali, Giorgio Morandi, Pittore, Milan, 1964, illustrated in color p. 110

Lamberto Vitali, Morandi, Dipinti, Catalogo generale, Volume primo 1913/1947, Milan, 1977, no. 244, illustrated n.p.

William S. Lieberman, The Nelson A. Rockefeller Collection: Masterpieces of Modern Art, New York, 1981, illustrated
in color p. 134

CATALOGUE NOTE
Natura morta is a brilliant early example of Morandi’s mastery of the still life, and the painterly virtuosity with which he
combined the simplest forms and subtlest palette into a delicate and perfectly balanced composition. The still life
remained central to Morandi’s art throughout his career, guided by his concern to bring together space, light, color and
form, and his great achievement was to reconcile this traditional genre with the abstract aesthetic of his own time.
Focusing his artistic efforts on a limited range of subjects, he was able to perfect these pictorial concerns to their
purest expression.
The use of simple everyday objects allows the artist to focus his attention on the pictorial elements of space, light,
color and form. Unlike the more austere and strictly geometrical forms of Morandi’s still lifes of the late 1940s and
1950s, the present early example, created in 1939, displays a wider range of shapes in which each object is distinctly
different from the others. Tightly grouped together, they are arranged at varying distances from the viewer, partially
overlapping and shadowing each other, thus forming a dynamic composition in which the eye is lead in a zig-zag line
from the smallest element in the front to the largest one at the back.
The suggestion of a table on which the elements are placed, denoted by a simple diagonal line at the front and by the
discontinued shadows at the back, further adds to the dynamic character of the composition. The three-dimensionality
defined by the table and the shadows would disappear from Morandi’s later compositions, in which both the objects
and the background would become flatter. The shadows, which would be almost completely abandoned in the 1950s,
play an important role in the present work. Lit from the left-hand side, the objects cast shadows which define their
contours, as well as their relationships with each other. All six elements are subtly modeled using the chiaro-scuro
technique, with a soft, warm coloration to their left, and a darker tone to their right. As is the case with Morandi’s most
accomplished paintings, the present work gracefully combines an earthy palette and a dynamic arrangement of
objects into a composition of sophisticated beauty.
Natura morta boasts an impressive provenance, with Nelson A. Rockefeller as one of the work’s first owners. During
Nelson Rockefeller’s career as vice-president, governor and a businessman, he managed to leave a lasting mark on
the art world. Rockefeller served as a trustee and the president of The Museum of Modern Art, and also amassed a
personal collection from around the world. Although the collection was vast—hundreds of objects—Rockefeller
remained intentional and passionate about his acquisitions. He has described his attitudes when approaching
artworks: “I'm interested in art that relates to life in our own day, that expresses the spirit of our time—art that isn't
cloistered and set apart, art that includes the house” (quoted in Twentieth-Century Art from The Nelson Aldrich
Rockefeller Collection (exhibition catalogue), The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1969, p. 11). This fall on
November 13, Sotheby's will be offering a selection of works from The Collection of Nelson and Happy Rockefeller in
a dedicated sale titled Modernist Vision, which encapsulates the couple's passion for twentieth-century art.

Fig. 1

Morandi at his studio in Bologna, 1953. Photograph by Herbert List.

Вам также может понравиться