Premium-Seiten ohne Registrierung:

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 26

PAUL HOWARD MANSHIP (1885-1966) AND BARRY FAULKNER (1881-1966)

Schätzpreis
0 $
Zuschlagspreis:
25.500 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 26

PAUL HOWARD MANSHIP (1885-1966) AND BARRY FAULKNER (1881-1966)

Schätzpreis
0 $
Zuschlagspreis:
25.500 $
Beschreibung:

PAUL HOWARD MANSHIP (1885-1966) AND BARRY FAULKNER (1881-1966)Important Tester Panel circa 1917 for the Manship's Home at 42 Washington Mews, New York, paint and gold leaf on a white ground, laid on canvas, the rectangular canvas composed of six painted reserves within gilt borders arranged as four large panels at the corners and two smaller panels aligned between them, all surrounded by elaborate gilt scrolling borders with zodiac symbols, medallions emblematic of virtues, and at the center two roundel portraits of Paul and Isabel and a standing portrait of their daughter Pauline as a putto, signed in initials 'B.F' lower left and 'P.M.' lower right height 73 1/2in (186cm); width 50 5/8in (127.5cm) FootnotesProvenance The Paul Manship Estate Private Massachusetts Collection, acquired directly from the above Literature Bob Mueller, 'Paul Manship and Barry Faulkner Eternal Friendship Forged in the Eternal City' (pp. 12-28 of "Coming Home! A Retrospective Exhibit of Parrish, Manship, Faulkner and Zorach", exhibition catalogue, Cornish Colony Museum, Windsor, Vt, 2006) Thayer Tolles, 'Daniel Chester French, Paul Manship and the John Pierpont Morgan Memorial for the Metropolitan Museum', Metropolitan Museum Journal, v. 41 (2006) John Manship, 'Paul Manship', Abbeville, NY, 1989 (illustrated as full-page plate) An exceptional and unique example of Paul Manship design, for his own family and living space, created at a time when Manship was finalising his designs for the J.P. Morgan Memorial at the Metropolitan Museum in New York (fig. 1). Paul Manship married his wife Isabel on New Year's Day 1913 and their first daughter, Pauline, was born at the end of that year. The Manships moved into 42 Washington Mews in 1915, shortly after its renovation into artist's studios and residences. Manship's studio was at number 44. At that time Washington Mews was a thriving creative and artistic community, and the Manships hosted parties and entertained Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney Charlie Chaplin, Gaston Lachaise and others. The desire for Manship to incorporate his art into his living space is shown in the few extant pieces of Manship designed furniture, including an oak liquor cabinet from 1918 designed by Manship, made by Luigi D'Olivio, and carved by Gaston Lachaise now in the collection of Two Red Roses, St Petersburg, FL; as well as the bronze balcony rails, painted interior elements, etc., installed in his later home on 319 E 72nd St, New York (illustrated in Town & Country, vol. 81, 1927). The tester panel is arranged (perhaps intentionally) in a fashion similar to a panelled door. Designed to be installed as a ceiling of an existing four-post or tester bed, it is composed of six rectangular paintings, the four larger ones depicting the Four Seasons, and the two smaller central paintings depicting Dawn and Night, all designed by Manship and painted by Faulkner. The two central paintings, one depicting a nude Olympian male forcefully pushing away the clouds to reveal the sun, and the other a beautiful female shrouded by night in a starry sky, prefigure "Day" and "Evening", two of the four sculptures Manship created for the 1939 New York World's Fair (fig. 2). The finely executed gilded borders by Manship include numerous zodiac symbols, including his much-loved animals - a crab, bull, scorpion, fish, lion and others; as well as the mythological and archaic figures for which Manship is also so well known, and numerous gilded roundels indicating Roman virtues. At the time of the panel's creation, Manship was finalising his designs for the Morgan Memorial that was installed in 1920 at the Metropolitan Museum in New York. The arrangement of figural scenes within ornate scrolling borders is strikingly similar in composition to the memorial, and it may be that in creating this panel scheme Manship was exploring thoughts of his own legacy and family, as he was carving those figural attributes and virtues so symbolic of the accomplishments of t

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 26
Auktion:
Datum:
14.12.2022
Auktionshaus:
Bonhams London
14 December 2022 | New York
Beschreibung:

PAUL HOWARD MANSHIP (1885-1966) AND BARRY FAULKNER (1881-1966)Important Tester Panel circa 1917 for the Manship's Home at 42 Washington Mews, New York, paint and gold leaf on a white ground, laid on canvas, the rectangular canvas composed of six painted reserves within gilt borders arranged as four large panels at the corners and two smaller panels aligned between them, all surrounded by elaborate gilt scrolling borders with zodiac symbols, medallions emblematic of virtues, and at the center two roundel portraits of Paul and Isabel and a standing portrait of their daughter Pauline as a putto, signed in initials 'B.F' lower left and 'P.M.' lower right height 73 1/2in (186cm); width 50 5/8in (127.5cm) FootnotesProvenance The Paul Manship Estate Private Massachusetts Collection, acquired directly from the above Literature Bob Mueller, 'Paul Manship and Barry Faulkner Eternal Friendship Forged in the Eternal City' (pp. 12-28 of "Coming Home! A Retrospective Exhibit of Parrish, Manship, Faulkner and Zorach", exhibition catalogue, Cornish Colony Museum, Windsor, Vt, 2006) Thayer Tolles, 'Daniel Chester French, Paul Manship and the John Pierpont Morgan Memorial for the Metropolitan Museum', Metropolitan Museum Journal, v. 41 (2006) John Manship, 'Paul Manship', Abbeville, NY, 1989 (illustrated as full-page plate) An exceptional and unique example of Paul Manship design, for his own family and living space, created at a time when Manship was finalising his designs for the J.P. Morgan Memorial at the Metropolitan Museum in New York (fig. 1). Paul Manship married his wife Isabel on New Year's Day 1913 and their first daughter, Pauline, was born at the end of that year. The Manships moved into 42 Washington Mews in 1915, shortly after its renovation into artist's studios and residences. Manship's studio was at number 44. At that time Washington Mews was a thriving creative and artistic community, and the Manships hosted parties and entertained Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney Charlie Chaplin, Gaston Lachaise and others. The desire for Manship to incorporate his art into his living space is shown in the few extant pieces of Manship designed furniture, including an oak liquor cabinet from 1918 designed by Manship, made by Luigi D'Olivio, and carved by Gaston Lachaise now in the collection of Two Red Roses, St Petersburg, FL; as well as the bronze balcony rails, painted interior elements, etc., installed in his later home on 319 E 72nd St, New York (illustrated in Town & Country, vol. 81, 1927). The tester panel is arranged (perhaps intentionally) in a fashion similar to a panelled door. Designed to be installed as a ceiling of an existing four-post or tester bed, it is composed of six rectangular paintings, the four larger ones depicting the Four Seasons, and the two smaller central paintings depicting Dawn and Night, all designed by Manship and painted by Faulkner. The two central paintings, one depicting a nude Olympian male forcefully pushing away the clouds to reveal the sun, and the other a beautiful female shrouded by night in a starry sky, prefigure "Day" and "Evening", two of the four sculptures Manship created for the 1939 New York World's Fair (fig. 2). The finely executed gilded borders by Manship include numerous zodiac symbols, including his much-loved animals - a crab, bull, scorpion, fish, lion and others; as well as the mythological and archaic figures for which Manship is also so well known, and numerous gilded roundels indicating Roman virtues. At the time of the panel's creation, Manship was finalising his designs for the Morgan Memorial that was installed in 1920 at the Metropolitan Museum in New York. The arrangement of figural scenes within ornate scrolling borders is strikingly similar in composition to the memorial, and it may be that in creating this panel scheme Manship was exploring thoughts of his own legacy and family, as he was carving those figural attributes and virtues so symbolic of the accomplishments of t

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 26
Auktion:
Datum:
14.12.2022
Auktionshaus:
Bonhams London
14 December 2022 | New York
LotSearch ausprobieren

Testen Sie LotSearch und seine Premium-Features 7 Tage - ohne Kosten!

  • Auktionssuche und Bieten
  • Preisdatenbank und Analysen
  • Individuelle automatische Suchaufträge
Jetzt einen Suchauftrag anlegen!

Lassen Sie sich automatisch über neue Objekte in kommenden Auktionen benachrichtigen.

Suchauftrag anlegen