Theo van Rysselberghe

( 1862 - 1926 )

Roses on a fence

Theo van Rysselberghe

( 1862 - 1926 )

Roses on a fence

  • Medium: Oil on canvas

  • Signed: Signed lower right

  • Size: 17.50" x 17.50" (44.5cm x 44.5cm)

  • Framed Size: 25.00" x 25.00" (63.5cm x 63.5cm)

£21,950.00
GBP

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Additional information

  • Provenance: Sotheby’s New York, 5 November 1969, lot 83.
    Christie’s Amsterdam, 9 June 2004, lot 87.
    Lancz Gallery, Brussels.
    Private collection, United Kingdom.
    Private collection, France.

  • Literature: This work is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Olivier Bertrand, editor of the catalogue raisonné of the artist, Luxembourg, dated 18 March 2022.

    Literature:
    Ronald Feltkamp, Théo Van Rysselberghe, Catalogue raisonné 1862 – 1926, Paris 2003, no. P-032, illustrated on p. 451.

    Exhibitions:
    Théo Van Rysselberghe Intime, Espace Culturel du Lavandou, Le Lavandou, 8 July – 18 September 2005, no. 12, illustrated in catalogue on p. 23.

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    Theo van Rysselberghe Biography

    View full artist profile

    Théodore van Rysselberghe was born into a family whose members included several architects. He studied under Canneel at the academy in Ghent, and then under Portaels in Brussels. Van Rysselbeghe was extremely well-off and could afford to travel extensively, painting and exhibiting as he went. He lived for several years in Paris, spending his summers by the Channel, in accordance with the Impressionist and Neo-Impressionist custom. He participated in the establishment of the Franco-Belgian artistic exchange group Les XX ( The 20) and in its various exhibitions. He was also a founder member of the Libre Esthétique movement. He exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants in Paris on several occasions. At that juncture, his painting was on the conventional side, fleshy and sombre, betraying some orientalist elements inherited perhaps from Portaels.

    Van Rysselberghe visited Spain and Morocco on several occasions from 1884, painting his Arab Storyteller and Fantasia. His colours gradually lightened and he began to emerge as a portrait artist. He was on intimate terms with Émile Verhaeren, and it was the latter who invited him to Paris, where van Rysselberghe was greatly impressed by Seurat's La Grande Jatte. He was not entirely convinced, however, by the scientific approach the Divisionists derived from the theory of colour expounded by Chevreul and espoused to a greater or lesser degree by Signac, Cross and Pissarro.

    From 1887, van Rysselberghe began painting in the Neo-Impressionist manner, becoming virtually the only artist to apply this approach to portraiture. Paintings such as Madame Oc. Ghysbrechts, Octave Maus (1885) and Madame Maus (1890) date from around this time. Van Rysselberghe also painted a number of landscapes, among them Promenade and Tartan Vessels at Sète. Around 1895, he joined Henry van de Velde in a bid to resuscitate the decorative arts. He designed posters, furniture, typographical elements and jewellery in the 'new style' and painted a large number of decorative panels specifically commissioned by architects.

    In 1898, he left Brussels and settled in Paris, where he moved in Symbolist literary circles. His wife - 'Madame Théo' or 'The Little Lady' - played an important role in the life of André Gide. In 1903, van Rysselberghe painted his celebrated Reading, where a large number of writers are depicted in a group surrounding Verhaeren, including Gide, Maeterlinck and Fénéon. He continued to paint essentially in the Neo-Impressionist manner, using visual effects achieved by juxtaposed patches of colour, with a predominance of violets, mauves and blues. While residing at St-Clair in Provence, however, he felt a need for a greater repertoire in terms of technique and colour. He duly abandoned the strict tenets of Neo-Impressionism and began painting in the Fauvist manner, using more intense colours in his seascapes and bathing scenes, where the female bathers' bodies are fleshed out by the strong colours of sea and sun.

    Museum and Gallery Holdings

    Amsterdam (Rijksmus.): Aquarium with Fish and Crayfish
    Brussels (MBA): Woman Reading and a Young Girl; Mademoiselle Z.; Promenade; Émile Verhaeren, Poet; Mandolinist; Octave Maus (1885); Madame Maus (1890); Fantasia (before 1884)
    Essen (Folkwang Mus.): Moonlight in Boulogne
    Ghent (Mus. voor Schone Kunsten): Reading; Dario de Regoyos, Spanish Painter
    Helsinki (Ateneumin Taidemus.): Midi Landscape
    Hyères: Portrait of Madame Deman
    Leipzig: Venetian Woman
    Ostend (Mus. voor Schone Kunsten)
    Otterlo (Kröller-Müller Mus.): Per-Kinder Point (1889); Pines at Cavalière (1904)
    Paris (Mus. d'Orsay): Estuary with Sailing Vessels (1892-1893); Portrait of Émile Verhaeren, Poet (1915, oil on canvas)
    Rotterdam (Mus. Boijmans Van Beuningen): Mirror
    Weimar: Fiery Sky

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