An oil painting, Temptation by Lado Gudiashvili will be sold on the Important Russian Art auction at Sotheby's on the 3rd of
June. Painted as a present to Nino Nicoladze, 'a legendary Parisian beauty' (as
Sotheby's describes her), it is set to change the owner after long 60
years.
Sotheby's press release:
Sotheby's press release:
'ProvenanceA gift from the artist to Nino NicoladzeAcquired from the above by the father of the present owners circa 1947-1948ExhibitedParis, Grand Palais des Champs-Elysées, Salon d'Automne, 1 November - 20 December 1922, no.1067Paris, Galerie Joseph Billiet & Co., Lado Goudiachvili, 9 - 23 January 1925, no. 3LiteratureM. Raynal, Lado Goudiachvili, Paris: Editions Au sans Pareil, 1925, illustrated pl.9V. Beridze, Gudiashvili, Tblisi, 1975, illustrated pl.8L.Gagua, Lado Gudiashvili: Kniga vospominanii, statʹi iz perepiski, sovremenniki o khudozhnike, Moscow 1987, illustrated p.81Catalogue NoteThe female figure in this superb large-scale work from Gudiashvili's Paris period is thought to be Nino Coquet (1881-1972), née Nicoladze, who was close to the artist and received the painting from him as a gift. A cousin of the great Georgian politician Irakli Tsérétéli, Nino was part of the artistic circles of Montparnasse and rented out rooms to artists during the 1920s. Her charm and beauty were legendary and Louis Aragon based a character in his 1934 book Les Cloches de Bâle on Nino.Through the paintings of Lado Gudiashvili one falls in love with Georgia’ wrote Maurice Raynault in his 1925 monograph on Gudiashvili. The offered lot, painted when the artist was barely twenty-five years old, is infused with the nostalgia for his homeland that fascinated French audiences. The aesthetic appeal of exotic landscape and mysterious figures is not dissimilar to those of Gauguin’s Tahitian canvases (fig.3). The male figure standing half concealed on the left of the picture resembles the bohemian Kinto peasants from canvases such as Kutezh kinto s zhenshchinei (exh. Salon d’Automne, 1920) while the female figure bears the distinctive features of Gudiashvili’s idealised Georgian beauty. Ironically it is while in Paris, when farthest from his homeland, that Gudiashvili produced his most resonant visions of Georgia.Having arrived in Paris on New Year’s Day in 1920 Gudiashvili was almost immediately recognised as a significant artistic force, most clearly demonstrated by the acceptance of four canvases at the Salon d’Automne that year. Visiting Gudiashvili’s studio after the exhibition Ignacio Zuloaga, who by this point enjoyed a considerable reputation in Europe, purchased a number of works, and Gudiashvili soon became an integral part of the circle of artists who frequented the Café de la Rotonde. Teachers at the Académie Ronson were impressed by his natural talents, and figures as diverse as André Breton heralded the young Georgian as an important new figure in Paris. The dealer James Rosenburg exhibited eight of Gudiashvili’s paintings in New York in 1923 alongside works by Matisse, Modigliani, Signac and Vlaminck; following a solo exhibition at the Boulle Gallery in 1925 the critic Maurice Reynault published a monograph on the young artist, who was not yet thirty.Paris held more for Gudiashvili than simply an exhibition space. The influence of the Nabis, in particular Paul Ranson (whose Parisian Academy Gudiashvili briefly attended), is evident in the striking palette, clearly delineated forms and individual Symbolist iconography of the current work. The theme of a reclining female nude together with a scopophilic figure most likely takes inspiration from works such as Ingres’ Grande Odalisque (1814, The Louvre Museum) and Manet’s Olympia (1863, Musée d’Orsay); the horse restrained, is perhaps a reflection of the artist’s own youthful ambition and energy. Both of these motifs feature heavily in Gudiashvili’s oeuvre, for example the latter in Kutezh na Fazeone (1920, Museum of Art named after Sh. Amiranashvili, Tblisi) and the former in Kupal’nitsa v lesu (1921).Gudiashvili’s success was in part due to his retention of a uniquely Georgian aesthetic. Before leaving for Paris, Gudiashvili assisted in the restoration of ancient frescoes in churches throughout Southern Georgia. The close study of these monuments had a profound effect on his style; the present composition for example, is theatrical but economical, with boldly outlined figures distinctly separated into fore and back grounds with a limited degree of modulation in the colouring. The adaptation of these Byzantine formal arrangements set Gudiashvili apart from his contemporaries.'
Previous Important Russian Art sale hosted
another of Gudiashvili's Paris Period oil painting, By the Black Stream. Praised as ‘a stunning example of Georgian
folklore seen through the prism of French impressionism’, it has fetched the
legendary £937,250. The Temptation is
amongst the most expensive pieces to offer, projecting the never-fading and
only-growing interest in Gudiashvili’s art.
For the online catalogue of the sale visit:
http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2013/important-russian-art-l13111/lots.list.1.30.esthl.asc.html
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