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André Masson

(French, 1898-1987)

L'éveil de la forêt

1957
oil and sand on canvas
105 x 25 cm (41⅜ x 9⅞ in.)
titled 'L'éveil de la forêt' (on the stretcher)

André et Rose Masson, Paris
Galleria Due Ci, Rome
Cleto Polcina Arte Moderna, Rome
Private collection, Italy

New York, Museum of Modern Art, p. 71, no. 76/291 (illustrated, titled Awakening of the Forest); This exhibition later travelled to Houston, The Museum of Fine Arts and Paris, Grand Palais André Masson, 1976-77
Aosta, Museo Archeologico, André Masson, la saggezza delirante della natura, 1995

This work is accompanied by a photo-certificate issued by the Comité Masson, dated 21.01.17 (no. 2051)

Price:
£75,000

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Additional Notes:

“André Masson’s presence on this side of the Atlantic during the war... was of inestimable benefit to us... He, more than anyone else, anticipated the new abstract painting, and I don’t believe he has received enough credit for it.” 
- Clement Greenberg

André Masson’s extensive oeuvre incorporates a variety of innovative approaches and techniques, throughout his early investigations of Cubism, to his high period of Surrealism and back to nature in the 1950s where he re-entered an Impressionist style of painting. His work is direct, impassioned and psychologically charged, with subjects - or figurative suggestions - at times alternating between the mysterious, explosive, erotic, violent, brutal, sensual, metaphysical, mythological, and classical, but always with a sense of immediacy and urgency evident in his gesture. 

Masson took great interest in psychoanalytic theory, in line with his engagement with Surrealism, inspiring his investigation of automatic art-making processes and motifs exploring of the realm of the subconscious. He furthermore had a familial connection, his brother-in-law being the celebrated psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan. 

Having moved to New York after the outbreak of the Second World War, Masson had a profound impact on the Abstract Expressionists who would emerge in New York in the 1940s, particularly the movement’s best-known proponent Jackson Pollock who immersed himself within the ideas of Jungian psychoanalysis, referencing archetypes and symbols in his work prior to the development of his free-form action paintings. Pollock’s ‘drip’ paintings can largely be seen to have evolved out of automatic painting ideas, Surrealist in nature and furthermore inspired by Native American sand painting. 

L'éveil de la forêt utilises sand within the composition, a technique that, for Masson, came about through his surrealist investigations into automatic drawing where chance was allowed to determine the course of the composition. He had used sand for such works in the 1920s and returned to the technique throughout periods in his career, writing to his dealer Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler in July 1955:

I am throwing sandy glue [‘colle ensablé’] onto stretched canvases. I like the result of this research, of this extreme spontaneity ... if in the past I threw sand onto glued surfaces, now it’s the glue that I throw onto the support, having only rhythm and the fire of inspiration as my starting point ... it’s always the same thing that I want, that is, to reveal movement, the blossoming, or the birth of things (this time it’s the act of creation in a pure state).

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