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Maurice B. Prendergast 1858-1924
Description
- Maurice Brazil Prendergast
- The Band Concert, Luxembourg Gardens
- signed with the artist's monogrammed initials MBP and dated Paris. France 1893, l.l.; also inscribed The Band Concert, Luxembourg Gardens on the reverse
- watercolor and pencil on joined paper
- 16 by 7 3/4 in.
- (40.6 by 19.6 cm)
Provenance
By descent to the present owners
Literature
Catalogue Note
Throughout the 1890s, Prendergast took as his subject the picturesque crowds who gathered at fashionable outdoor cafes and dancing halls, such as the Bal Bullier, a particularly popular spot for American artists and tourists. Writing about a watercolor titled Park Scene, Paris, which relates closely to The Band Concert, Luxembourg Gardens, Dr. Richard Wattenmaker observes, “Park Scene, Paris of circa 1893-94 depends on the brisk pencil notations that underlie the delicacy of the watercolor touches laid over them. At this early stage, Maurice already maintained the freshness of his color, without sacrificing spontaneity. While he was absorbed in exploring the Impressionist discoveries of light and color, his sketchbooks and watercolors disclose knowledge of Manet and Delacroix watercolors as well as their paintings. In fact, Maurice’s constant use of sketchbooks is akin to Delacroix’s methods of careful color annotations” (Maurice Prendergast, New York, 1994, p. 23).
Fluid, transparent strokes of color extend beyond the borders of the well defined pencil under-drawings and create a feeling of immediacy and sense of spontaneity characteristic of Prendergast’s most fully developed watercolors but which belie the highly sophisticated and calculated organization behind the finished composition. In each work, Prendergast has worked carefully and deliberately, filling the sheet with layers of pigment, saturating the paper with water and putting down strokes of color, sometimes blotting to create a transparent field of color such as the woman’s veil, or placing another layer of color to create a richly patterned and finished surface. A multitude of brilliant blues ranging from navy to turquoise is interwoven with a variety of jewel-toned and pastel greens, highlighted with touches of white and punctuated with strokes of deep burgundy.
Although Prendergast’s reputation was subject to periods of ups and downs throughout his career, the memorial exhibition held by the Cleveland Museum of Art after his death in 1924, and the glowing articles that followed by such highly regarded figures as Duncan Phillips, Lloyd Goodrich and Van Wych Brooks, cemented Prendergast’s standing as one of America’s greatest watercolorists.