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RAOUL DUFY : A NEW VISION

Cet article se compose de 8 pages.
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This cultivated and enchanted playground was created by Dufy in a visual language that could only belong to the 20th Century. The strongest, most vital factor was speed- and a tremendously fast attack on the image to produce an illusion of instantaneity- without any sign of modification or labour.

Dufy's characteristic use of a compact tersely eloquent calligraphy and pure, clean, fast-flowing line is perhaps the most radical extension in the first half of the 20th Century of Van Gogh's passionately forceful and explosive handling of line and colour in his own later paintings, and particularly in the drawings made with a reed pen, as Bryan Robertson wrote in his introduction of the catalogue of the Dufy exhibition held at the Hayward Gallery in London from November 9th 1983 until February 5th 1984.

Dufy was enthralled all his life by Persian art. The floating line and exquisitely turned hieroglyphic notations for wheat-ears in another masterwork, Le Grand Champ de blé of 1933, as well as the abstractly shaped areas of colour, showed this very clearly. The woodcuts produced in a primitive way by Gauguin were also a source of inspiration in early drawings and designs.

The second but really co-existent factor in Dufy's art was obviously colour, mostly unconstrained by tonality. The colour in Dufy is never more than approximately contained by the form and sometimes it is set against the form in abstract emotive counterpoint.

Occasionally, colour was liberated entirely, in floating patches of maximum intensity and brilliance in their own right, as an independent celebration. This occurred pre-eminently in the L'Altana murals of 1928-29 and in Le Grand Champ de Blé of 1933 where colour assumes this independent action as well as serving descriptive purposes while line sets the scene.

Dufy's combination of fast speed through line and attack with vivid colour is by its nature free of nostalgia, a crucial 20th Century freedom in art, and in Dufy's art the combination of forces hits a modern nerve with special gaiety, verve and spiritual vibration. To set against our ferocious destruction of youth in this century by two wars, there have been two eras in which youth, more than in any other epoch for centuries, has enjoyed some kind of focus of attention and a specially sympathetic ambience. In the 1920's, a privileged minority were on a spotlit stage until the great depression brought widespread unemployment and a more sober society. For a broader cross-section of very young men and women in the 1950's and early 1960's there was another great epoch of freedom and brightness.

Dufy's visual world made a strong appeal to young people in 1920's and 1930's because of its radiance and optimism and that extraordinary sense of speed and vitality which could be seen to fit into the general love of raciness in this period.

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