MAXFIELD PARRISH (1870-1966)
MAXFIELD PARRISH (1870-1966)
MAXFIELD PARRISH (1870-1966)
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MAXFIELD PARRISH (1870-1966)
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On occasion, Christie's has a direct financial int… 顯示更多 先鋒創見:保羅·艾倫珍藏
馬克思菲爾德·派黎胥(1870 - 1966)

《山頂》

細節
馬克思菲爾德·派黎胥馬克思菲爾德·派黎胥(1870 - 1966)《山頂》簽名及日期:Copyright 1926/Maxfield Parrish(左下)油彩 木板35 3/4 x 22 1/4英寸(91 x 56.5公分)1926年作
來源
麻薩諸塞州私人收藏;紐約佳士得,遺產拍賣,1988年12月2日,拍品編號178
紐約美國插畫師畫廊(購自上述拍賣)
已故藏家於1997年購自上述收藏
出版
Reinthal and Newman著《The House of Art print》,約1926至1927年出版
托馬斯·墨菲公司日曆,1942年出版
C. Ludwig著《Maxfield Parrish》,紐約,1973年,第138至139,144至145及215頁,編號722(插圖,第139頁,圖91)
A. Gilbert著《Maxfield Parrish: The Masterworks》,伯克利,第154及157頁(彩色插圖,圖7.7)
L.S. Cutler,J. Goffman及American Illustrators Gallery著《Maxfield Parrish》,紐約,1993年,第2,4及8頁(卷首彩色插圖,第2頁)
L.S. Cutler及J.G. Cutler著《Maxfield Parrish: A Retrospective》,舊金山,1995年,第127頁(彩色插圖)
A.M. Gilbert著《Parrish and Photography》,普蘭菲爾德,1998年,第29頁
L.S. Cutler及Judy A.G. Cutler著《Maxfield Parrish》,聖地亞哥,2001年,第118至119頁(彩色插圖,第118頁)
L.S. Cutler,J.G. Cutler及the National Museum of American Illustration著《Maxfield Parrish and the American Imagists》,艾迪遜,2004年,第262頁(彩色插圖)
A.G. Smith著《Maxfield Parrish: Master of Make-Believe》,華盛頓特區,2005年,第93頁
展覽
1995年4月至12月 「Maxfield Parrish: A Retrospective」展覽 東京伊勢丹美術館、大阪美術館、山梨縣立美術館及諾曼·洛克威爾博物館 第50、125、166至167及180頁,編號72(彩色插圖,第125頁)
注意事項
On occasion, Christie's has a direct financial interest in the outcome of the sale of certain lots consigned for sale. This will usually be where it has guaranteed to the Seller that whatever the outcome of the auction, the Seller will receive a minimum sale price for the work. This is known as a minimum price guarantee. This is such a lot.

榮譽呈獻

Max Carter
Max Carter Vice Chairman, 20th and 21st Century Art, Americas

拍品專文

No other early twentieth-century American artist so firmly captured the public imagination as Maxfield Parrish. By 1925, one in four households in the country owned a print of his masterwork Daybreak (Private Collection), which outsold all reproductions but those of Paul Cezanne and Vincent Van Gogh. Following his runaway success with this work, Parrish sought to create a fresh but equally compelling image “to be a rich gold tone, and needless to say, as beautiful as possible, with a great landscape behind the figures…” (quoted in C. Ludwig, Maxfield Parrish, New York, 1973, p. 143). The result was the present work Hilltop, reproduced as a print in three sizes by The House of Art from 1926-1927. Opening our eyes to an idyllic world of wonder and delight, Hilltop mesmerizes viewers of today just as it did when first published almost a century ago.
While Parrish began his career as an illustrator, he wanted compositions like Hilltop to speak for themselves. For example, when asked to write a paragraph to accompany Daybreak, he declined, explaining, “To my mind if a picture does not tell its own story, it’s better to have the story without the picture…the picture tells all there is, there is nothing more” (quoted in ibid., p. 143). Hilltop accordingly provides a fully immersive experience, transporting the viewer to ponder the captivating beauty of nature alongside Parrish’s muses. Despite his earlier statement, Parrish wrote while in progress on the present work, “It will be of two girls under a big tree at the top of a hill, with a great distance beyond, late afternoon all flooded with golden light, and needless to say, depending upon the message carried by the figures—their joy or quiet contemplation of the environment” (quoted in ibid., p. 142).
Parrish prized honesty and innocence in his subjects, choosing to pose his family and friends in lieu of professional models. For Hilltop, his models were the daughters of his friend, the notable U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Learned Hand. Working in his studio with paper cut-outs, photography and props, he carefully designed his composition using the principles of ancient Roman and Greek formulas to create harmonic proportions. He then employed a time-consuming glazing technique inspired by Old Master painters. Beginning with a white ground, he applied paint directly from the tube, layering pure pigment and varnish over and over to achieve a heightened vibrancy and a smooth, richly luminous surface. The enamel-like saturation, coupled with the variegated light coming through the foliage, is a trademark of Parrish’s work and adds to the mystical environment.
Yet, while artfully imbued with an otherworldly atmosphere, the setting of Hilltop is grounded in Parrish’s close study of the natural environment surrounding his home “The Oaks,” located near the Connecticut River that forms the border of New Hampshire and Vermont. The property appealed to Parrish for its extraordinary view, as he poetically described, “through old oak trunks and branches…a sense of great space and glorious things in store for you…hills and woodlands, high pastures, and beyond them, more and bluer hills, from New Hampshire on one side and Vermont on the other, come tumbling down into the broad valley of the Connecticut, with one grand mountain over it all” (quoted in ibid., p. 17).
In Hilltop the artist focuses on the detailed contours of these natural wonders, elevating them to Edenic idealism while anticipating the pure landscape paintings which would dominate his career in subsequent years. A portal into a fantastical realm, Hilltop glows with an otherworldly magic, drawing the viewer into the tapestry of Parrish’s imagination.

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