THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN
Fernand Khnopff (1858-1921)

细节
Fernand Khnopff (1858-1921)

La venue de l'aube à Fosset

signed 'Fernand Khnopff'; oil on canvas
12 5/8 x 15¾in. (32 x 40cm.)

Painted circa 1882
来源
Jules Dujardin, Brussels
Madame Giroux, Brussels
出版
R. L. Delevoy, et alia, Fernand Khnopff, Catalogue de l'Oeuvre, Brussels, 1987, pp. 411-2, no. 48 bis (illus.)
M. Draguet, Khnopff ou l'ambigu poétique, Brussels, 1995 (illus. in colour p. 33)
展览
Brussels, Palais des Beaux-Arts, Fernand Khnopff et ses raports avec la Seccession Viennoise, 2 Oct.-6 Dec. 1987, no. 20
Tokyo, Bunkumura Museum, Himeji, Minicipal Museum of Art, Nagoya, City Art Museum and Yamanashi, Museum of Art, Fernand Khnopff, 8 June-11 Nov. 1990, p. 71, no. 3, (illus. in colour)

拍品专文

Throughout his career, Khnopff created a series of small 'silent landscapes of heather and woods, stretching on long hills' (letter to Paul Schultze, Naumburg, 1899) at Fosset, a village in the Belgian Ardennes, near Marche, where his family had a summer home.

In these works, Khnopff differentiated himself from the then fashionable taste of human presence in any painted form, with all the formality of light and colour. The one exception he made in this series of 'silent landscapes' is in A Fosset, Un Soir of 1886, where two figures are seen, yet only from behind (see R. L. Delevoy, et alia, op. cit., no. 91).

In the 1904 monograph on Khnopff Louis Dumont-Wilden writes 'De même ces paysages d'Ardennes, ses études faites à Fosset, rien ne ressemble moins aux improvisations lyriques ou aux consciencieuses évocations de nature où se complaisent la plupart des paysagistes belges. Ce que Khnopff a cherché dans le site ardennais, c'est le repos assourdi que représente pour lui la gamme des verts, c'est l'harmonie tendre ou desséchée de ces lignes de coteaux, qui s'étendent jusqu'aux plus lointains horizons la succession de leurs plans bleutés.'

Whereas his countryman and contemporary Felician Rops used the landscape merely as an 'aide memoire', Khnopff felt that nature presents the idea. The basis of all Khnopffian work lies in the belief of superiority of the spiritual over that of the material.