Old Master Paintings & Works on Paper Day Auction

Old Master Paintings & Works on Paper Day Auction

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 231. Federico Zandomeneghi, Young Woman with a.

Federico Zandomeneghi

Federico Zandomeneghi, Young Woman with a

Lot Closed

July 4, 11:09 AM GMT

Estimate

40,000 - 60,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Property of a Private Collector


Federico Zandomeneghi

Venice 1841 - 1917 Paris

Young Woman with a Bouquet of Flowers


signed upper left: F. Zandomeneghi

pastel

413 by 330 mm

Durand-Ruel, Paris (possibly his label on the verso: ?277 / Zandomeneghi / [jeu]ne femme au / bouquet des fleurs / 267 ...- pastel)

acquired directly from the artist;

Sale, New York, Sotheby's, Old Master Drawings including the collection of Professor Egbert Haverkamp Begemann, 31 January 2018, lot 217

Through the 1860s, the Florentine critic Diego Martelli had championed the Italian group of plein-air painters known as the Macchiaioli who shared the same principles as the French Impressionists and influenced Federico Zandomeneghi’s early landscapes and genre scenes. Fittingly, it was likely Martelli who prompted his friend Zandomeneghi’s trip from his native Venice to Paris in 1874, after enthusiastically reporting on that year’s first Impressionist exhibition. He introduced the artist to Edgar Degas, who proved to be particularly inspiring to “Zandò” (as he came to be known by his fellow French artists), inviting the Italian to exhibit at the fourth, fifth, sixth, and eighth Impressionist exhibitions of 1879, 1880, 1881, and 1886.1 Zandò initially found it difficult to establish himself in Paris’ competitive art market, but soon drew the attention of the powerful dealer Paul Durand-Ruel who sponsored three one-man shows for the artist in 1893, 1897, and1903, and handled the sale of much of his production. Zandomeneghi’s artistic life in Paris grew to be so prolific and profitable that he never returned to Italy, becoming a fixture at the Café de la Nouvelle-Athènes along with many of the city’s avant-garde painters, writers and musicians.


Young Woman with a Bouquet of Flowers, like many of Zandomeneghi’s favorite subjects, was taken from the late nineteenth century life of the Parisienne. While fellow Italian expatriates like Giuseppe de Nittis and Giovanni Boldini favored painting fashionably dressed ladies strolling along the Bois de Boulogne or luxuriating in chicly designed interiors, Zandomeneghi generally preferred portraying women and girls observed in the private moments of their everyday life. In the present work the compositional cropping and slight lean of the figure’s posture creates a sense of intimacy and connects subject and viewer (a technique also used by Degas). Varying his application of pastel, a medium the artist frequently employed from the mid-1890s, Zandomeneghi suggested the softness of his model’s pale skin, the exposed paper creating highlights along her forehead and cheek, while a rich buildup of the medium creates thick, soft upswept strands hair decorated with a finely carved wooden hairpin - perhaps an allusion to the contemporary trend of Japonisme.


While Zandomeneghi’s working habits and compositional choices linked him to Degas and Pierre-Auguste Renoir, as well as Mary Cassattand Berthe Morisot, his compositions are specific to him and his Italian heritage. Works like Young Woman with a Bouquet of Flowers earned him the additional nickname of “Le vénitien”, stemming from his brilliant yet subtle use of color which recalls the work of the Macchiaioli, and points toward the Italian Divisionists and Symbolists Giuseppe Pelizza da Volpedo or Giovanni Segantini. In the present work Zandomeneghi subtly shifts the soft pinks and buttery yellows of casually arranged daisies with the vibrant blue of cornflowers, while white swirls and wavy vertical lines create abstract patterns of costume design and wallpaper. The complex intertwining of tone and texture of Young Woman with a Bouquet of Flowers is a hallmark of the artist’s best pastels and illustrates the artist’s recollection that “looking, listening, arguing, I was transformed like all other artists, from Pissarro to Degas, from Manet to Renoir; my artistic life was a series of infinite evolutions that cannot be analyzed, that cannot be explained… As for my technique, a very vague term, the one I used was my own, I did not borrow from anyone."


  1. A. Dumas, Degas and the Italians in Paris, exh. cat., Royal Scottish Academy, Glasgow 2004, pp. 19-20
  2. E. Piceni, Zandomeneghi, Milan 1991, p. 60