Henri Matisse Artwork Details

 
 

Detailed Description

Size: Image size :  428 x  410   mms,  Paper size  560 x 460 mms
Reference: Duthuit-Garnaud  477
Edition:  Epreuve D’Etat - There was also a signed and numbered ediution of 50, 3 Trial proofs and 10 artists proofs.
Public Collections: Bibliotheque National, Paris

Note 1: Cortot , Alfred  ( Denis) b.1877; d. 1962. French pianist and conductor. At the  Paris Conservatoire he studied piano with Decombes, one of Chopins last pupils, and then with Louis Diemer, winning a first prize in 1896.  Immediately he was heard and admired as an interpreter of Beethoven's concertos at the Colonne and Lamoureux concerts, and he also appeared  with Eduard Risler in concerts of two-piano arrangements of Wagner's music  In 1898 he was appointed first as a choral coach, and then as assistant conductor, at Bayreuth, where he worked until 1901 under Mottl and Richter.  This experience enabled him to prepare and conduct the first Paris performance of  Gotterdammerung  (May, 1902) and a notable  Tristan  (June, 1902). His Societe de Festivals Lyriques (1902) was followed by the formation of a concert society for which he conducted the first performances in France of Parsifal  ( in concert form), Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis  and Brahms’ Requiem, as well as still unpublished works by Chausson, Magnard and Roussel. In 1904 he was entrusted with the directions of the concerts given by the Societe nationale and also engaged to conduct the series of Concerts Populaires at Lille. This activity as  conductor, which made Cortot one of the leading figures in French musical life before he was 30, did not dampen his enthusiasm for piano although it inevitably limited the number of  his performances. In 1905 the Cortot- Thibaud- Casals trio was founded and immediately became , and for many years remained, the most admired ensemble of its kind. From 1907 to 1917 Cortot was a professor of piano at the Paris Conservatoire, but his activities as a soloist in Europe and the USA made it impossible for him to devote regular, uninterrupted periods to academic teaching. He therefore founded in 1919 The Ecole Normale de Musique, for which he appointed a distinguished staff of teachers, while he himself was responsible for interpretation classes which were to become legendary. In 1943 he founded the Societe de Musique de Chambre de la Societe des Concerts du Conservatoire. As a pianist he was remarkable for his intimate understanding of Romantic music, especially Schumann, though his Chopin was prized very highly and continues, even in the comparatively primitive recordings available, to dazzle pianists by its lyrical delicacy and nobility. He was an ardent champion of the new French piano music of his day, and devoted three volumes to its exposition. Cortot made editions of most of Chopin’s piano music (and some by Liszt, Mendelssohn,Schumann and Weber); they are ‘editions de travail’ which include technical exercise related to the music, and annotations. Cortot’s more general observations of piano technique provided material for a book entitled Rational principles of Piano Technique published in 1928. Cortot was an avid and systematic collector and he cared for and catalogued his substantial library of musical autographs, literature, first and early editions, letters, portraits, coins and postage stamps. The literature fell under 13 headings, but only the first volume of the catalogue was published( Bibliotheque Alfred Cortot:
Premiere Partie: traits at autres ouvrages theoriques des Xve, XVIe, XVIIe, et XVIIIe siecles, Paris, 1936). After his death in 1962 the printed music, some of great rarity, was dispersed mainly between the British Museum,The Newberry Library in Chicago and the University of California at Berkeley. Important manuscripts were bought for the Lehmann Foundation in the Pierpoint-Morgan Library in New York. This sympathetic portrait by Matisse is extremely lifelike and is one of two graphic portraits the artist made of this famous and well loved figure. The pianist was also a great friend of Picasso.

Note 2: This State proof is on different paper to the other examples of this work we have seen. It seems a slighly thinner version with a slightly different colour. Not always does Duthuit list all the types of paper made by the artist and we are entirley satisfied that this work is aythgetic and correct.

Note 3: The stone has been cancelled. Provenance: Collection of Madame Henriette Darry Carrere. Madame Carrere was the model of Matisse for very many years and no doubt was given a number of his works in the course of employment. This is a very interesting and important provenance to have for this piece.

 

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