拍品专文
Painted in 1920, Femme au gueridon belongs to a pivotal moment in Henri Hayden’s career, when the artist was working at the height of his engagement with Synthetic Cubism. Having settled in Paris after arriving from Poland in 1907, Hayden absorbed the lessons of Cezanne and, during the First World War, embraced the formal innovations of contemporaries such as Picasso, Braque, and Metzinger. By 1920, under contract with the dealer Léonce Rosenberg, he had developed a highly personal interpretation of Cubism, characterized by a sensitive balance between structure, color, and figuration.
In the present work, a seated female figure is constructed through an intricate arrangement of interlocking planes, her form fragmented and reassembled across multiple viewpoints. The composition retains a clear figurative anchor—visible in the folded hands, the suggestion of a face, and the enveloping armchair—yet these elements are subsumed within a broader architectural framework of shifting geometric facets. The palette—dominated by cool blues, muted greens, and earthy browns—creates a sense of cohesion and calm, while passages of patterning and linear articulation animate the figure’s costume and surrounding space. Together, these elements exemplify Hayden’s distinctive contribution to Cubism, in which the human figure is both structured and enlivened through color and form.
In the present work, a seated female figure is constructed through an intricate arrangement of interlocking planes, her form fragmented and reassembled across multiple viewpoints. The composition retains a clear figurative anchor—visible in the folded hands, the suggestion of a face, and the enveloping armchair—yet these elements are subsumed within a broader architectural framework of shifting geometric facets. The palette—dominated by cool blues, muted greens, and earthy browns—creates a sense of cohesion and calm, while passages of patterning and linear articulation animate the figure’s costume and surrounding space. Together, these elements exemplify Hayden’s distinctive contribution to Cubism, in which the human figure is both structured and enlivened through color and form.
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