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Livres anciens et modernes

George-Daniel De Monfreid - Paul Gauguin [D'Après]

Les Immémoriaux - Bois dessiné, gravé et tiré en couleur par George-Daniel de Monfreid pour le frontispice du roman de Victor Segalen

1907

4600,00 €

Feu Follet Librairie

(Paris, France)

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Mode de Paiement

Détails

Année
1907
Auteur
George-Daniel De Monfreid - Paul Gauguin [D'Après]
Format
12.40 x 18.90 cm
Thème
Voyages & Horizons lointains|Océanie
Description
une feuille
Dédicacée
Non
Premiére Edition
Oui

Description

s. d. [1907] | 12.40 x 18.90 cm | une feuille | Les Immémoriaux – Woodcut drawn, engraved and printed in color by George-Daniel de Monfreid for the frontispiece of Victor Segalen's novel [1907] | subject: 12,4 x 18,9 cm | board: 15,1 x 20,9 cm | one sheet Original color proof of a woodcut inspired by the work of Gauguin and engraved by George-Daniel de Monfreid for a frontispiece project, remaining unpublished, of Victor Segalen's Les Immémoriaux. Only one other original color proof and one print run, in black and white (see below), are known to date. Printed in two tones, green and brown, on old Japan and enhanced with gilt painting by the artist. This engraved woodcut was to illustrate, as a frontispiece, the original edition of Segalen's Les Immémoriaux, an ethnographic novel, directly inspired by his trip to Polynesia following in Gauguin's footsteps. Segalen, therefore, asked the painter's follower and closest friend to produce it, to whom he also offered Noa Noa, bought in Papeete during the auction sale of Gauguin's goods. A mutual friendship and admiration was then born between Segalen and Monfreid under the tutelary aegis of the late painter. It is also in constant reference to the Master, that the two friends produce this frontispiece, to which Segalen attached great importance but which he will be obliged to abandon due to publishing costs: “This is a lot more interesting for me: what will you do for my plate? If I dared to imagine something, it would be a formidable full-face figure, very plain, very worn, and of an androgyne with male tendences; in short, the Maori type described by Gauguin in his Noa Noa and produced by him in the carved wood that remained in Tahiti (face of a woman comparable to that which you possess) and of which I gave you a photograph I believe. [.] Are you in favor of reserving your frontispiece for luxury and friends' copies or of prostituting it in current copies? Allow me to renew a timid desire, expressed at your Vollard exhibition: if you print some more proofs from your color engravings, in pochoir, do not forget me.” (Brest, 2 November 1906). Monfreid's response, 8 January 1907: “I have started looking for your plate. Ah! I will not describe it to you yet: it does not come according to what your book should evoke. Besides, I am not rich in imagination, let alone in “symbolism”, I remain – as you have noticed – a “naturalist” (but not a “realist”) and to summarize the impression of your Les Immémoriaux, one would have to be Gauguin. Finally, even so, I am not losing hope of doing something; only that I need a little more time to study it.”. Monfreid will produce two trial woodcuts – whose sizes (22 x 12 cm and 23 x 16 cm) were not adapted to the edition – each time using the same formidable and frustrated figures Segalen wanted. Our woodcut seems to be the final version of these studies, perfectly adapted to the in-12 format of Mercure de France. However, the illustration includes the name of the author at the top, yet Segalen, a naval officer, could not sign a novel and had to choose a pseudonym, Max-Anély. This constraint may have contributed to this much-desired frontispiece being abandoned. However, in all likelihood, it was validated by the two trial woodcuts. Monfreid will also use the same male face to produce the ex-libris requested by Segalen. In his letter dated 2 November, the poet already imagined a confidential print for Monfreid's work. In the end, only two color copies of this proof, enhanced in gold, seem to have been preserved, the second being today in the collections of the Musée Maurice Denis in Saint-Germain-en-Laye. The artist had likely printed one for himself and offered the other to Segalen who dreamed of owning etching of the one he called his Boss and to whom he would dedicate his collection of poems, Peintures. * [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] | Epreuve originale en couleur d'un bois inspiré de l'œuvre de Gauguin et gravé par George-Daniel de Mo
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