- 151
Marc Chagall
Description
- Marc Chagall
- Les Amoureux dans le bouquet de fleurs
- Signed Marc Chagall (lower right)
- Oil on canvas
- 31 5/8 by 25 5/8 in.
- 80.4 by 65.2 cm
Provenance
Private Collection, Tokyo
Acquired from the above in 1993
Exhibited
Condition
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Catalogue Note
Chagall claimed that he had never known of flowers in Russia and that they really came to represent France for him. In his paintings Chagall repeatedly drew from a vocabulary of personal symbolism so that when painting a bouquet, for example, it was like painting a landscape of his adopted country. Chagall resided in Saint-Paul-de-Vence from 1960 until his death and sought to capture the town's easy charm and luminosity. According to Chagall's biographer Franz Meyer, "the light, the vegetation, the rhythm of life all contributed to the rise of a more relaxed, airy, sensuous style in which the magic of colour dominates more and more with the passing years. At Vence he witnessed the daily miracle of growth and blossoming in the mild, strong all-pervading light—an experience in which earth and matter had their place" (Franz Meyer, Marc Chagall, London, 1964, p. 519). The whimsical amalgamation of these elements results in an image full of vibrancy and tenderness. Moreover, it hails from a period when the artist was reflecting on his past with a sense of nostalgia whilst simultaneously celebrating his peaceful present life in Saint-Paul-de-Vence. With Les Amoureux dans le bouquet de fleurs, Chagall has allowed his imagination and instinct to govern his paintbrush, presenting the viewer with his tranquil disposition and celebrating the beauty and serenity he has discovered in his South of France surroundings.
Fig. 1 Marc Chagall, L'Anniversaire, oil on canvas, 1915, Museum of Modern Art, New York