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Gaston Lachaise

Gaston Lachaise (March 19, 1882 – October 18, 1935) was a French-born sculptor, active in the early 20th century. A native of Paris, he was most noted for his female nudes such as Standing Woman. Gaston Lachaise was taught the refinement of European sculpture while living in France. He met a young American woman, Isabel Dutaud Nagle, and the pair moved to America, where his craft reached maturity and he was influenced and inspired by American ways. Lachaise helped redefine the female nude in a new and powerful manner. His drawings also reflected his new style of the female form.

Gaston Lachaise
Gaston Lachaise photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1934
BornMarch 19, 1882
Paris, France
DiedOctober 18, 1935(1935-10-18) (aged 53)
NationalityFrench
EducationÉcole des Beaux-Arts
Known forSculpture
Notable workStanding Woman (1932)

Early life and education edit

Born in Paris, Lachaise was the son of Marie Barré (1856-1940), herself the daughter of a sculptor and Jean Lachaise(1848-1901), a cabinetmaker who designed furniture for the private apartment of Gustave Eiffel in the Eiffel Tower, among other commissions.[1] At age 13 he entered a craft school, the École Municipale Bernard Palissy, where he was trained in the decorative arts, and from 1898 to 1904 he studied sculpture at the École des Beaux-Arts under Gabriel-Jules Thomas. He began his artistic career as a designer of Art Nouveau decorative objects for the French jeweler René Lalique.

Move to America edit

Around 1902 or 1903 he met and fell in love with Isabel Dutaud Nagle (1872–1957), a married American woman of French Canadian descent (she eventually was divorced from her husband and married Lachaise).[2] When she returned to her home near Boston in 1904, Lachaise vowed to follow her. After briefly working for the master jewelry and glass designer René Lalique in order to pay for his passage, he arrived in America in 1906, never to return to his native land. For the next fifteen years he earned a living as a sculptor's assistant. In Boston he worked for H. H. Kitson, an academic sculptor producing primarily military monuments.[3] In 1912 Lachaise went to New York City helping Kitson in his studio at 7 MacDougal Alley. Soon after, he went to work as an assistant to the sculptor Paul Manship, while also creating his own art. His association with Paul Manship lasted until 1921; the work of both sculptors can be seen at Rockefeller Center.

Lachaise had many studios in Greenwich village, including 20 West 8th Street (from 1924 to 1926/27, razed); 55 West 8th Street (from 1927 to 1933, still standing), and 42 Washington Mews (1933-his death, still standing). In 1922, Lachaise bought a home and studio in Georgetown, Maine, Marsden Hartley being a frequent visitor.[4] In America, Lachaise matured into his unique style and portrayal of the female nude. He worked mostly in bronze. Lachaise's nudes were seen as strong yet gentle, husky but curvy, and seem to be referring to fertility as well. "The breasts, the abdomen, the thighs, the buttocks—upon each of these elements the sculptor lavishes a powerful and incisive massiveness, a rounded voluminousness, that answers not to the descriptions of nature but to an ideal prescribed by his own emotions."[5]

Works edit

 
Floating Figure (1927, bronze), no. 5 from an edition of 7, Purchased 1978 by the National Gallery of Australia
 
Standing Woman at UCLA, 1932
 
Georgia O'Keeffe (marble), 1927, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Lachaise's personal idiom was developed during the first decade of the twentieth century with his encounter with Isabel. But it was not until his arrival in New York, that he realized his principal manifesto: his concept of "Woman" as a force of nature based on his wife's image. In his own words he described his many sculpted images of the female nude in contrasting terms: vigorous, robust, and massive yet in repose, serene and eternal.[citation needed]

In 1918, (eight months after he became an American citizen and married Isabel), Lachaise began his meteoric rise in the New York art world with his first solo show, held at the Bourgeois Galleries, which featured his challenging, heroic-sized Woman (Elevation). Lachaise's most famous work, Standing Woman (modeled 1928–30, copyrighted 1932, cast ca. 1933, Museum of Modern Art, New York), typifies the image that Lachaise worked and reworked: a voluptuous female nude with sinuous, tapered limbs. Lachaise was also known as a portraitist. He executed busts of famous artists and literary celebrities, such as Georgia O'Keeffe, John Marin, Marianne Moore and Lincoln Kirstein. In 1935 the Museum of Modern Art in New York City held a retrospective exhibition of Lachaise's work, the first at that institution for any American sculptor.[6]

Gaston Lachaise was an extremely versatile sculptor, technically expert in several media and accomplished with both ideal and commercial effort. His work was chosen for several major New York architectural commissions – including the 195 Broadway and Rockefeller Center. And the more commercial aspect of his sculptural output – the production of fountains and decorative bronzes, primarily depicting animals – offered him some financial relief. Yet Lachaise's artistic legacy is closely bound to his depictions of "Woman." His late works, which are extreme in their manipulation of his ideal of the human anatomy, are erotic and emotional and avant-garde.

Called by ARTnews the "greatest American sculptor of his time",[citation needed] he played a critical role in the birth of American Modernism, pushing the boundaries of nude figuration with his innovative explorations of the human body.

His artistic career was cut short by his unexpected death from acute leukemia on October 18, 1935.

Collections edit

Public collections holding his works include: United States:

Australia:

  • The Australian National Gallery, Canberra, Australia
  • The National Gallery of Victoria (NGV), Melbourne, Australia

Czech Republic:

  • National Gallery Prague, Veletržní Palace, Czech Republic

France:

  • Musée Courbet, Ornans, France
  • Musée d'Art Modern de Paris, France
  • Musée d'Art et d'Industrie de Roubaix, André Diligent, "La Piscine," France

United Kingdom:

  • The Tate Modern, London, UK

Foundation edit

In 1963, according to the will of Lachaise's widow, Isabel, the Lachaise Foundation was established with the intention of perpetuating Gaston Lachaise's artistic legacy for the public benefit.[7]

Since the founding of the Lachaise Foundation, the estate of the artist has been exclusively represented by the following galleries: Weyhe Gallery; Felix Landau Gallery and the Robert Schoelkopf Gallery (1962-1991); Salander-O'Reilly Galleries (1991-2007); Gerald Peters Gallery (2009-2013); David Findlay Jr. Gallery (2015-2016) until that gallery was acquired [8] by Wally Findlay Galleries/ Findlay Galleries (2016-2021).[9]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Boston: The Lachaise Foundation. Archived from the original on 2010-03-14. Retrieved 2010-01-10.
  2. ^ . Time. January 17, 1964. Archived from the original on March 5, 2010.
  3. ^ . Portrait of the Art World. Washington, D.C.: National Portrait Gallery. Archived from the original on 2010-03-14. Retrieved 2010-01-10.
  4. ^ Retrieved 2017-04-25.
  5. ^ Kramer 1967, p. 13.
  6. ^ "GASTON LACHAISE, SCULPTOR, 53, DIES", The New York Times, New York (published 1935-10-19), p. 17, 19 October 1935, ISSN 0362-4331, retrieved 2010-01-10
  7. ^ "Lachaise Foundation". www.lachaisefoundation.org. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  8. ^ "House of Findlay Reunited as Wally Findlay Acquires David Findlay Jr. Gallery| artnet News". artnet News. 2016-04-20. Retrieved 2022-06-20.
  9. ^ "A Look at Gaston Lachaise's Voluptuous Female Nudes | artnet News". artnet News. 2017-01-24. Retrieved 2018-11-17.

Sources edit

  • Budny, Virginia, "Gaston Lachaise's American Venus: The Genesis and Evolution of Elevation," The American Art Journal, vols. 34-35 (2003–2004), pp. 62–143.
  • Kramer, Hilton (1967). The Sculpture of Gaston Lachaise. New York: The Eakins Press.

Further reading edit

  • Mayor, A. Hyatt. "Gaston Lachaise." Hound & Horn, July-Sept. 1932, pp. [563]-564, followed by three reproductions of his sculptures and a portfolio of eight reproductions of his drawings.
  • Taylor, Sue. "Gaston Lachaise". Art in America, November 2013. New York: Brant Publications, Inc. pp. 183–184. (Review of 2013 Lachaise exhibition at the Portland Art Museum, Oregon.)
  • Silver, Ken; Paula Hornbostel; Peter Sutton. Face & Figure: The Sculpture of Gaston Lachaise, Bruce Museum, Greenwich, CT, 2012.
  • Bourgeois, Louise, "Obsession"; Jean Clair, "Gaia and Gorgon"; Paula Hornbostel, "Portrait of Isabel: The Letters and Photographs of Gaston Lachaise"; Hilton Kramer, "The Passion of Gaston Lachaise" in exhibition catalogue Gaston Lachaise, 1882-1935, Editions Gallimard, published in the USA 2007.
  • Joubin, Franck. Gaston Lachaise (1882-1935): un sculpteur pour l'Amérique. MA Dissertation. Paris: École du Louvre, 2015. 2 vol. (159+70 p.).

External links edit

  • The Lachaise Foundation official website
  • Gaston Lachaise Bio - Findlay Galleries
  • in American public collections, on the French Sculpture Census website  
  • Gaston Lachaise Collection. Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.

gaston, lachaise, march, 1882, october, 1935, french, born, sculptor, active, early, 20th, century, native, paris, most, noted, female, nudes, such, standing, woman, taught, refinement, european, sculpture, while, living, france, young, american, woman, isabel. Gaston Lachaise March 19 1882 October 18 1935 was a French born sculptor active in the early 20th century A native of Paris he was most noted for his female nudes such as Standing Woman Gaston Lachaise was taught the refinement of European sculpture while living in France He met a young American woman Isabel Dutaud Nagle and the pair moved to America where his craft reached maturity and he was influenced and inspired by American ways Lachaise helped redefine the female nude in a new and powerful manner His drawings also reflected his new style of the female form Gaston LachaiseGaston Lachaise photographed by Carl Van Vechten 1934BornMarch 19 1882Paris FranceDiedOctober 18 1935 1935 10 18 aged 53 NationalityFrenchEducationEcole des Beaux ArtsKnown forSculptureNotable workStanding Woman 1932 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Move to America 3 Works 4 Collections 5 Foundation 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and education editBorn in Paris Lachaise was the son of Marie Barre 1856 1940 herself the daughter of a sculptor and Jean Lachaise 1848 1901 a cabinetmaker who designed furniture for the private apartment of Gustave Eiffel in the Eiffel Tower among other commissions 1 At age 13 he entered a craft school the Ecole Municipale Bernard Palissy where he was trained in the decorative arts and from 1898 to 1904 he studied sculpture at the Ecole des Beaux Arts under Gabriel Jules Thomas He began his artistic career as a designer of Art Nouveau decorative objects for the French jeweler Rene Lalique Move to America editAround 1902 or 1903 he met and fell in love with Isabel Dutaud Nagle 1872 1957 a married American woman of French Canadian descent she eventually was divorced from her husband and married Lachaise 2 When she returned to her home near Boston in 1904 Lachaise vowed to follow her After briefly working for the master jewelry and glass designer Rene Lalique in order to pay for his passage he arrived in America in 1906 never to return to his native land For the next fifteen years he earned a living as a sculptor s assistant In Boston he worked for H H Kitson an academic sculptor producing primarily military monuments 3 In 1912 Lachaise went to New York City helping Kitson in his studio at 7 MacDougal Alley Soon after he went to work as an assistant to the sculptor Paul Manship while also creating his own art His association with Paul Manship lasted until 1921 the work of both sculptors can be seen at Rockefeller Center Lachaise had many studios in Greenwich village including 20 West 8th Street from 1924 to 1926 27 razed 55 West 8th Street from 1927 to 1933 still standing and 42 Washington Mews 1933 his death still standing In 1922 Lachaise bought a home and studio in Georgetown Maine Marsden Hartley being a frequent visitor 4 In America Lachaise matured into his unique style and portrayal of the female nude He worked mostly in bronze Lachaise s nudes were seen as strong yet gentle husky but curvy and seem to be referring to fertility as well The breasts the abdomen the thighs the buttocks upon each of these elements the sculptor lavishes a powerful and incisive massiveness a rounded voluminousness that answers not to the descriptions of nature but to an ideal prescribed by his own emotions 5 Works edit nbsp Floating Figure 1927 bronze no 5 from an edition of 7 Purchased 1978 by the National Gallery of Australia nbsp Standing Woman at UCLA 1932 nbsp Georgia O Keeffe marble 1927 Metropolitan Museum of Art Lachaise s personal idiom was developed during the first decade of the twentieth century with his encounter with Isabel But it was not until his arrival in New York that he realized his principal manifesto his concept of Woman as a force of nature based on his wife s image In his own words he described his many sculpted images of the female nude in contrasting terms vigorous robust and massive yet in repose serene and eternal citation needed In 1918 eight months after he became an American citizen and married Isabel Lachaise began his meteoric rise in the New York art world with his first solo show held at the Bourgeois Galleries which featured his challenging heroic sized Woman Elevation Lachaise s most famous work Standing Woman modeled 1928 30 copyrighted 1932 cast ca 1933 Museum of Modern Art New York typifies the image that Lachaise worked and reworked a voluptuous female nude with sinuous tapered limbs Lachaise was also known as a portraitist He executed busts of famous artists and literary celebrities such as Georgia O Keeffe John Marin Marianne Moore and Lincoln Kirstein In 1935 the Museum of Modern Art in New York City held a retrospective exhibition of Lachaise s work the first at that institution for any American sculptor 6 Gaston Lachaise was an extremely versatile sculptor technically expert in several media and accomplished with both ideal and commercial effort His work was chosen for several major New York architectural commissions including the 195 Broadway and Rockefeller Center And the more commercial aspect of his sculptural output the production of fountains and decorative bronzes primarily depicting animals offered him some financial relief Yet Lachaise s artistic legacy is closely bound to his depictions of Woman His late works which are extreme in their manipulation of his ideal of the human anatomy are erotic and emotional and avant garde Called by ARTnews the greatest American sculptor of his time citation needed he played a critical role in the birth of American Modernism pushing the boundaries of nude figuration with his innovative explorations of the human body His artistic career was cut short by his unexpected death from acute leukemia on October 18 1935 Collections editPublic collections holding his works include United States Amon Carter Museum of American Art Art Institute of Chicago Addison Gallery of American Art Brooklyn Museum of Art Cleveland Museum of Art Currier Museum of Art Detroit Institute of Arts Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco Harvard University Art Museums Honolulu Museum of Art Indiana University Art Museum Memorial Art Gallery Metropolitan Museum of Art Minneapolis Institute of Art Milwaukee Art Museum Museum of Fine Arts Boston Museum of Modern Art Nasher Sculpture Center National Portrait Gallery New Mexico Museum of Art Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Phillips Collection Sheldon Museum of Art Smart Museum of Art Smithsonian American Art Museum Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Walker Art Center Worcester Art Museum Australia The Australian National Gallery Canberra Australia The National Gallery of Victoria NGV Melbourne Australia Czech Republic National Gallery Prague Veletrzni Palace Czech Republic France Musee Courbet Ornans France Musee d Art Modern de Paris France Musee d Art et d Industrie de Roubaix Andre Diligent La Piscine France United Kingdom The Tate Modern London UKFoundation editIn 1963 according to the will of Lachaise s widow Isabel the Lachaise Foundation was established with the intention of perpetuating Gaston Lachaise s artistic legacy for the public benefit 7 Since the founding of the Lachaise Foundation the estate of the artist has been exclusively represented by the following galleries Weyhe Gallery Felix Landau Gallery and the Robert Schoelkopf Gallery 1962 1991 Salander O Reilly Galleries 1991 2007 Gerald Peters Gallery 2009 2013 David Findlay Jr Gallery 2015 2016 until that gallery was acquired 8 by Wally Findlay Galleries Findlay Galleries 2016 2021 9 See also editFloating FigureReferences edit Biography Boston The Lachaise Foundation Archived from the original on 2010 03 14 Retrieved 2010 01 10 Art Radiating Sex amp Soul Time January 17 1964 Archived from the original on March 5 2010 GASTON LACHAISE Portrait of the Art World Washington D C National Portrait Gallery Archived from the original on 2010 03 14 Retrieved 2010 01 10 Seguinland artists exhibition at the Portland Museum of Art summer 2011 Maine Travel Maven Retrieved 2017 04 25 Kramer 1967 p 13 GASTON LACHAISE SCULPTOR 53 DIES The New York Times New York published 1935 10 19 p 17 19 October 1935 ISSN 0362 4331 retrieved 2010 01 10 Lachaise Foundation www lachaisefoundation org Retrieved 2018 11 17 House of Findlay Reunited as Wally Findlay Acquires David Findlay Jr Gallery artnet News artnet News 2016 04 20 Retrieved 2022 06 20 A Look at Gaston Lachaise s Voluptuous Female Nudes artnet News artnet News 2017 01 24 Retrieved 2018 11 17 Sources editBudny Virginia Gaston Lachaise s American Venus The Genesis and Evolution of Elevation The American Art Journal vols 34 35 2003 2004 pp 62 143 Kramer Hilton 1967 The Sculpture of Gaston Lachaise New York The Eakins Press Further reading editMayor A Hyatt Gaston Lachaise Hound amp Horn July Sept 1932 pp 563 564 followed by three reproductions of his sculptures and a portfolio of eight reproductions of his drawings Taylor Sue Gaston Lachaise Art in America November 2013 New York Brant Publications Inc pp 183 184 Review of 2013 Lachaise exhibition at the Portland Art Museum Oregon Silver Ken Paula Hornbostel Peter Sutton Face amp Figure The Sculpture of Gaston Lachaise Bruce Museum Greenwich CT 2012 Bourgeois Louise Obsession Jean Clair Gaia and Gorgon Paula Hornbostel Portrait of Isabel The Letters and Photographs of Gaston Lachaise Hilton Kramer The Passion of Gaston Lachaise in exhibition catalogue Gaston Lachaise 1882 1935 Editions Gallimard published in the USA 2007 Joubin Franck Gaston Lachaise 1882 1935 un sculpteur pour l Amerique MA Dissertation Paris Ecole du Louvre 2015 2 vol 159 70 p External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gaston Lachaise The Lachaise Foundation official website Gaston Lachaise Bio Findlay Galleries Gaston Lachaise in American public collections on the French Sculpture Census website nbsp Gaston Lachaise Collection Yale Collection of American Literature Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gaston Lachaise amp oldid 1219552243, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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