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RAOUL DUFY : A NEW VISION

Cet article se compose de 8 pages.
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Dufy painted this blue room as a plainly adored subject throughout his life. He painted it with sprawling or standing nude models, with his own pictures on the walls and portfolios on the floor or quite bare and empty, or with sculptures, plants, and easel and some rugs. In addition, the sky seen from his window had its own life and Dufy's clouds exhaled sharp identities.

In all his paintings of interiors, the studio series or hotel rooms, Dufy used the disclosures of doors and windows without curtains as a spatial trap and as framing and formalising devices to emphasise the formal interplays between interior and exterior space and perspective. This intriguing game was further complicated by a reflective mirror such as in the beautifully composed and orchestrated Interior with an opened window of 1928.

In 1927 in Vallauris, the pillars and archways supporting the blue domed ceiling of the pavilion high above the town also frame separated vignettes of landscape, all of course with blue sky which echoed the blue-domed interior. In L'Atelier, l'impasse Guelma of 1937 he turned the whole interior view of his studio into an abstract composition of flat coloured planes, subtly textured and lit, which were the foreground or push back into space. Dufy had turned his studio into the purest painting and it was one of his greatest masterpieces. One can understand why its present owner had to wait for fifteen years before Dufy accepted to part with his painting.

Dufy worked in the coffee importing offices by the shipyards at Le Havre during his youth and this potent symbol of exotic, faraway countries and long voyages stuck to his memory. Outside his studio, he painted sailing ships with billowing sails like La Caravelle. He also painted scattered still-life of grapes, melon and strawberries on the grass, possibly a souvenir of a picnic.

With Picasso, Braque and Marie Laurencin, Dufy was part of the group that was closest to Apollinaire, the famous poet. L'Obelisque, the link with antiquity, with Apollo and Cérès, first seen in a painting of La place d'Hyères, l'obélisque et le kiosque à musique of 1927, and Le Donjon, the romantic brick ruins of a dungeon in Normandy, first seen in a beautiful bucolic Composition of 1924, sometimes called Harvest, which also shows a still life, and in the wall hanging for Paul Poiret in 1925, L'Aqueduc ou l'été, where the still life on the grass made another appearance. These motifs recur separately or together in many works and figure most tenderly and spaciously in the four great mural decorations made for Mr Arthur Weisweiller's villa L'Altana in Antibes in 1928-29.

There is also in Dufy's repertoire, the pier and the bathing beach of the Casino Marie-Christine with the little harbour, the shallow cliffs, the church, the bathers and the fishermen of his youthful playground in real life : Sainte Adresse, already painted by Eugène Boudin and Claude Monet, when Dufy was still a boy, and first seen in a painting he produced in 1904- and devastatingly abstracted and transformed by singing, pulsating blues in shifting drenching light in a later painting of the pier : Le Débarcadère of 1921.

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