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RAOUL DUFY : A NEW VISION

Cet article se compose de 8 pages.
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Dufy, from the example of his painting and drawing as well as from his own textile designs, had the widest and the deepest influence in applied art. In fact he did work harder at various forms of applied art than any serious painter of the 20th Century and his achievement in the field of decorative art can only be described as monumental. His work as a designer of fabrics was unparalleled and matched the greatness of his contribution as a draughtsman.

His exceptional fluency, grace and spiritual refinement can be seen at its most complex convergence in the drawing of Le Pont de Nogent with the lines darting and swooping and then coming to rest, then moving on, relapsing into tangled skeins of tones, form and volume, skimming away, and up to indicate, beyond the flags and the bridge, and the foliage : space, light and atmosphere.

Dufy matched this mastery in his designs for fabrics, made between 1911 and 1933, at first for Paul Poiret's dresses which founded the modern shape and style for women and opened a door late for Chanel and Schiaparelli and then for the great Maison Bianchini-Férier in Lyons. Dufy's designs were so great because of their endless fertility of ideas. These were never trivial and their consummate sense of style, of fitness, never flagged. In fact, the artist always seemed inventively to be several steps ahead of others, with even more ideas in reserve. With him there was no sense of strain and complacency.

There was implicit modesty in their conception, a modesty that one does not find elsewhere in modern design. Dufy was at ease producing designs for silk, satin, brocade or cotton fabrics and had always in mind the fact that he was working on something else than a sheet of paper or a canvas. In this domain, he was an inventor of genius though he did not invent a language of forms quite so radically as Matisse. He however gave something personal and dynamically alive to the 20th Century. He invented his own world.

A good many of the fabric designs produced by Dufy in fact anticipate many of the later themes and pursuits of advanced abstract art in later decades. They also touch on the pop art of the 1960's in those designs in which irreconcilable opposites are made to work together, like flowers and other emblems super-imposed over graded stripes.

There is no doubt that Dufy looked a great deal at Persian, Indian, Chinese or Japanese textiles but he never just tried to adapt his designs from some grand source. Dufy's roses notably were endless series of lyric poems.

Dufy was most famous for his scenes of racecourses and yacht races or regattas. These were delightful records of a given time and place.

Dufy's instinct for abstract structure also revealed itself as early as 1905 in the first of several La Rue Pavoisée paintings and these street scenes, bedecked with flags of the 14th July or other celebrations, anticipated by fifty years the way in which Hofmann, for example, in the US bankleted out big areas of his canvases in the late 1950's, thus eliminating vaguely figurative areas and appearing to pierce the figured space.

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