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RAOUL DUFY : A NEW VISION

Cet article se compose de 8 pages.
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The world created by Dufy is not only concerned with speed, attack and surge, or with landmarks and motifs which, however transformed by imagination, were affectionately cherished all his life. Two other precious and all-pervading attributes of Dufy's art must be considered : luxury, and love. Each of these qualities finds magnificent aesthetic expression throughout his œuvre.

Dufy's own special feeling for luxury was inherent in his approach to nature. The love for each blade of grass, every insect, each flower and every delightful prospect of tree and glade was also in his paintings, and his printed materials.

Such a delicate balance between worldliness and pure spirit in the face of nature has been in French art from Fouquet to Bauchant and has been extremely moving.

Dufy enjoyed this sense of luxury in the abundance of nature and simply conveyed its essence and the strollers on the promenade, the flowers or the fishermen or the harvesters or the swimmers and the rowers, even the motorcars and the familiar landmarks of Paris, devised by men, were all embraced as part of this nature.

It was a trustful and loving vision despite the fact that Dufy lived through two world wars and endured a crippling form of arthritis which trapped him in a wheelchair during the last decade of his life.

Born in 1877, he grew up in the last quarter of the 19th Century with direct links with the Arts and Crafts movements, the awareness of Japanese art, Persian art, primitive art, Gauguin and the Impressionists and the intimate, dense but finely wrought and patterned evocations of domesticity by the Nabis and Vuillard. Dufy himself should be regarded as the most faithful and consistent of all the Fauves. During the first years of his career, he was probably at his best regarding the construction of his works with pure colours evenly balanced from 1905 until 1912. At the turn of the century, he had produced paintings in a style reminiscent of that of Boudin, notably with his Plage de Sainte-Adresse showing women, men and children seated or standing on the beach or strolling on a wooden pier barring the middle of the painting.

It was remarkable that Dufy embraced the 20th Century so wholeheartedly, to become, unknowingly, one of the most brilliants props or totems of the jazz age after his turn-of-the-century groundwork in painting impressionist beach scenes. He then ended by painting the gigantic visual equivalent of a massively scored oratorio or choral symphony The Fée Electricity mural, the biggest painting in the world, in 1937-38.

The other great attribute of Dufy's art, after luxury, is love and not only love for nature or for women. In fact Dufy loved humanity as a whole. He was known for his extraordinary amiability, wit, cheerfulness, freedom from spite or envy, modest spirituality, friendly ease with other artists and even his dealers. He had close men friends in Apollinaire, Braque, Picasso, Friesz as well as in many patrons.

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