Title: Der Hof
Date: 1920
Dimensions: 49,50 cm x 60 cm
Genre: Painting
Year of acquisition: 1958
Whereabouts: Museum Ludwig, Köln
Medium: Öl auf Leinwand
Museum director at time of acquisition: Otto H. Förster
Alfred Flechtheim and André Derain
The French painter and sculptor André Derain belongs to the Cubists and Fauves with whom he exhibited in the Salon des Indépendants in Paris. From 1901 he shared a studio with an artist friend, Maurice de Vlaminck, in Paris where he also regularly discussed ideas with the Cubist artists George Braque and Pablo Picasso. Towards the end of the 1920s he was attracted by the policies of the National Socialists. When the German ‘Propagandastaffel’ – the propaganda squadron – invited French artists to visit the studios of their German colleagues in 1941, organised by the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, Derain was among them. Other major artists included Vlaminck, Othon Friesz, Cornelis Van Dingen, Charles Despiau and Paul Belmondo. Subsequently the New York magazine ‘Time’ put Derain on the blacklist of ‘collabos’ who had to reckon on being sentenced after the war. Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler (1884–1979), who was based in Paris and with whose gallery Derain had signed an exclusivity agreement in 1907, was deeply disappointed. In 1920 Kahnweiler dedicated an art-theoretical treatise to him under the pseudonym Daniel Henry. It deals with the artist’s genius with Cubist subjects and places Derain in the tradition of the avant-garde artist Paul Cézanne. His Fauvist period on the other hand shows the influence of Henri Matisse.
André Derain’s international fame is largely attributable to Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. Immediately after entering a cooperation agreement in 1921 with Alfred Flechtheim, the latter stated what he needed for the opening of his new branch gallery in Berlin at Kahnweiler’s: “What we must have: one or two very important pictures by Derain; several very good works by your other artists and a few of your early Picasso drawings.” Flechtheim in fact exhibited three works by Derain at the opening exhibition in October 1921. Derain’s solo exhibition in Flechtheim’s gallery in Berlin in April 1929 included numerous watercolours and drawings in addition to 69 oil paintings. In his foreword, Flechtheim thanked his “friend Mr. Henry Kahnweiler of Paris” for helping to make the exhibition actually happen. Derain was an important artist in Flechtheim’s gallery, being a major participant at at least fifteen group exhibitions between 1913 and 1930.
Description
Das Gemälde zeigt die hoch aufragenden Mauern eines Hofes mit einer weiblichen Figur im Vordergrund und ist wahrscheinlich in der Nähe von Rom entstanden. Zur rechten der Frau befindet sich ein Tor, hinter dem Bäume und Landschaft sichtbar werden. Der Künstler reduziert die Farbskala auf gedämpfte Braun-, Grün- und Ockertöne. In einer gleichmäßigen und dünnen Pinselschrift – zum Teil ritzt der Künstler in das Grün der Bäume - werden die Formen wie die Person vereinfacht dargestellt, doch die reale Bildwirklichkeit bleibt für das Werk bestimmend.
Bibliography
Ausstellung André Derain. Galerie Alfred Flechtheim, Düsseldorf 1927, Kat-Nr. 30.
Ausstellung André Derain. Gemälde, Aquarelle, Zeichnungen, Galerie Alfred Flechtheim, Berlin 1929, Kat-Nr. 23 (als Sammlung Strecker Wiesbaden).
Siegfried Gohr (Hg.): Museum Ludwig Köln. Gemälde, Skulpturen, Environments vom Expressionismus bis zur Gegenwart. Bestandskatalog, München 1986, S. 56.
Hans Albert Peters und Stephan von Wiese (Hg.): Alfred Flechtheim. Sammler. Kunsthändler. Verleger, Ausst.-Kat. Kunstmuseum Düsseldorf, Köln 1987, S. 245.