Two Women Sewing by Louis Valtat

Louis Valtat
Two Women Sewing
pencil heightened with watercolour on typewriter paper
atelier stamp lower right; titled and dated circa 1922 on a gallery label on the backing on the reverse
10.375 x 8.5 ins ( 26.4 x 21.6 cms ) ( sheet )
Auction Estimate: $3,000.00 - $5,000.00
Price Realized $3,120.00
Sale date: June 8th 2023
Albert White Gallery, Toronto
Canadian Corporate Collection
“Louis Valtat: Rétrospective Centenaire (1869-1968)”, Petit Palais, Genève, 1969, unpaginated
Immersed in the Parisian art scene, in 1894 Voltat collaborated with Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec in the decor for the avant-garde Théâtre de l’Œuvre and later made several visits to Auguste Renoir in Cagnes- sur-Mer, with whom he collaborated on a sculpture of Paul Cézanne. His brushstrokes and colour palette became bolder as he spent more time in the Mediterranean coast, although he never went so far as to fully embrace Fauvism alongside Matisse, Derain and Vlaminck, with whom he exhibited at the Salon d’Automne in 1906. In a retrospective at Le Petit Palais in 1969, Georges Peillex comments on the artist serving as the link between Impressionism and Fauvism: “Valtat belongs to a generation of artists in between the Impressionists and post 1900 revolutionaries. It could have been said about him that he represents the indispensable link that accounts for the transition from Monet to Matisse.”
Valtat painted a wide variety of subjects that included genre scenes, landscapes, and still life. “Two Women Sewing”, dating to 1922, was painted during a period when the artist spent most of his time at his house in the village of Choisel, about an hour outside of Paris. The drawing is composed of simple yet carefully chosen lines to depict two seated women sewing on their laps. Valtat has added accents of red and royal blue‒a colour palette he adopted while in the south of France, inspired by the Mediterranean sea.
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