André Auclair, The 3 Musicians (circa 1930)
- Dimensions :
- H45 x W35 x D2
- Color :
- red
- Material :
- paper
- Style :
- vintage
ANDRÉ AUCLAIR (Paris 1893 - Saint-Thomé 1976) The 3 Musicians. Circa 1930. Gouache on paper. 30.5 X 20.5 cm (frame: 45.5 X 35 cm) Inscribed on the back: André Auclair (1893-1971) / The 3 Musicians. Framed under glass. André Auclair, born in Paris in 1893, studied at the École des Arts Décoratifs and the École des Beaux-Arts. Like so many great artists, he pursued a dual career as a painter and a designer for the decorative arts. Auclair was a painter, sculptor, ceramist, printmaker, tapestry designer (his father had been a weaver at the Gobelins), and stained-glass designer. In the 1920s and 1930s, he was a member of the Société des Artistes Indépendants, and he regularly exhibited his paintings and drawings at the Salon des Indépendants and the Salon des Tuileries. He also taught painting at the École de Montparnasse. This infinitely subtle composition of a trio of classical musicians—a cellist, a violinist, and a harpist—executed in black line drawing and organic blocks of gouache, is an important Cubist work dating from the heart of the Cubist period. It should not be confused with late Cubist works from the 1940s to the 1960s, when many artists of average talent jumped on the bandwagon. Auclair, like all the other original Cubists, did not confine himself to the style and evolved quite rapidly. For these musicians, Auclair was also inspired by the illumination of medieval manuscripts, and this fusion of Cubism and Medievalism (for a modern chamber music subject) is typical of Auclair's visual and graphic intelligence. This is probably the original pattern for a larger work executed in oils.