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RAOUL DUFY : A NEW VISION

Cet article se compose de 8 pages.
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Dufy's Fauve and Cubist paintings are exceptionally powerful though he refused to bow to any of the Cubist orthodoxies. In the history of Fauvism, Matisse, Braque, Derain and Vlaminck figure strongly, but rarely Dufy, and this seems to be unfair in some way but explainable due to the fact that Dufy had his own personality.

His painting of La Grande Baigneuse was heroic by any standards and even the later racecourse and yachting paintings show a strong abstract predilection which continually goes far beyond mere topography. These paintings are like visual tone-poems, with their veils and bands of colour, their merger of sea and sky into one enveloping great sweep of blue, structured by squares of light, their own scintillating areas of colour setting up a counterpoint at variance with the objects depicted. The scenes of yachting regattas with their strings of brightly coloured flags are obviously abstract in many ways, but even more emphatically abstract are those yachting subjects in which the furling of sails and other convolutions of air, sea, light, space, wheeling gulls and spiralling in swirling conical and triangular shapes- the sails being transformed into a series of magical evocations of movement which, however practical at the start, end in Dufy's hands as abstract structures of great beauty.

His racecourse scenes have the same qualities with the figures becoming essences, wraiths, or like flowers, everything being again given up to the crisp, jaunty interaction between green turf, red brick buildings, white railings, multi-coloured crowds, green trees against blue sky with sprightly puffs of clouds. Dufy was a celebrator as well as an inventor and he loved festivals whenever he could find them, on land or on sea.

Given the dazzling range of Dufy's, it has to be said that the quality of invention, right through his mature working life, is overwhelmingly high. Equally forceful is the constant seriousness of the work, and the purity and inspired concentration in his approach to every aspect of painting and drawing. Dufy never coasted along, never took refuge in easy solutions though some of his works tend to reflect some easiness.

Dufy conducted himself in an indomitable way during his last years when arthritis kept him in a wheel chair. Still, he managed to work in a somewhat cheerful way.

Auction-room prices for Dufy have risen steadily during the past 30 years while the artist has been much cherished by collectors in Europe and in the United States as well as in Japan.

Many of the most remarkable private collections of modern times have superb examples of Dufy's art such as the Phillips Collection in Washington. When Dufy died in 1953, art had decisively moved on to different pursuits. In the early 1960's Dufy receded in everyone's memory and faded from view until the early 1980's when he once again became much back in favour after young artists had finally taken the measure of his great influence on art. Finally, Dufy meant pleasure and joy altogether.

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