拍品专文
Painted circa 1904, Madame Arthur Fontaine en rose is a refined expression of Les Nabis interior aesthetics, in which Édouard Vuillard dissolves the boundaries between figure and décor to evoke a world of hushed intimacy. The composition unfolds as a tapestry of interlocking patterns—wallpaper, upholstery, carpet—within which the sitter is gently absorbed, her rose-toned dress echoing and modulating the surrounding chromatic harmonies. Rather than asserting a fixed presence, she appears as a fleeting, almost atmospheric apparition, her identity inseparable from the domestic space she inhabits. This synthesis of figure and ground, so central to Vuillard’s Nabi practice, reflects his enduring preoccupation with the poetics of interior life, where memory, perception and decoration coalesce.
The sitter, Madame Arthur Fontaine (born Marie Desjardins), belonged to the cultivated Parisian milieu that sustained Vuillard and his circle. Her husband, Arthur Fontaine, was a prominent civil servant and intellectual, and their home provided the artist with a setting aligned with his preferred subjects: intimate, bourgeois interiors animated by quiet psychological presence. While less overtly theatrical than the salons of Misia Natanson or the theatrical world of the Théâtre de l’Œuvre, the Fontaine household offered Vuillard a similarly receptive environment in which to explore the subtleties of modern domesticity.
The provenance of the present work underscores this personal and continuous history. Likely acquired directly from the artist by Arthur Fontaine, the painting appears to have remained within the sitter’s family—passing to Marie Desjardins and subsequently by descent to Jean-Arthur Fontaine—until the mid-20th century. It was then likely acquired by Sam Salz directly from the Fontaine family before entering the collection of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller III in October 1960, one of the most discerning American collections of modern French painting. As such, the work has effectively passed through only two families since its creation, a rare and highly desirable continuity that reinforces both its intimacy and its exceptional provenance.
The sitter, Madame Arthur Fontaine (born Marie Desjardins), belonged to the cultivated Parisian milieu that sustained Vuillard and his circle. Her husband, Arthur Fontaine, was a prominent civil servant and intellectual, and their home provided the artist with a setting aligned with his preferred subjects: intimate, bourgeois interiors animated by quiet psychological presence. While less overtly theatrical than the salons of Misia Natanson or the theatrical world of the Théâtre de l’Œuvre, the Fontaine household offered Vuillard a similarly receptive environment in which to explore the subtleties of modern domesticity.
The provenance of the present work underscores this personal and continuous history. Likely acquired directly from the artist by Arthur Fontaine, the painting appears to have remained within the sitter’s family—passing to Marie Desjardins and subsequently by descent to Jean-Arthur Fontaine—until the mid-20th century. It was then likely acquired by Sam Salz directly from the Fontaine family before entering the collection of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller III in October 1960, one of the most discerning American collections of modern French painting. As such, the work has effectively passed through only two families since its creation, a rare and highly desirable continuity that reinforces both its intimacy and its exceptional provenance.
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