- 46
John Duncan Fergusson
Description
- John Duncan Fergusson
- Boulevard Montparnasse, Evening
- signed, inscribed and dated on the backboard: J.D FERGUSSON./ PARIS 1907.; titled on an artist's label attached to the backboard: John D. Fergusson. Esq./ 4, Clouston Street, GLASGOW. N. W./ "Boulevard Montparnasse, evening"
- oil on board
- 27.5 by 35 cm.; 10 3/4 by 13 3/4 in.
Provenance
T & R Annan & Sons, Glasgow;
Ian McNicol;
Dr & Mrs J. Shanks;
C.C.Harper;
Paisnel Gallery, London 1991;
Private Collection
Exhibited
Condition
"In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective, qualified opinion. Prospective buyers should also refer to any Important Notices regarding this sale, which are printed in the Sale Catalogue.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF BUSINESS PRINTED IN THE SALE CATALOGUE."
Catalogue Note
Boulevard Montparnasse, Evening was painted in 1907 and is contemporary with another panel of the same dimensions entitled Place de l'Etoile. Whilst Place de l'Etoile depicts a late afternoon scene, Fergusson's view of the Boulevard Montparnasse was painted in the evening when the carriage lamps have been lit and the women are dressed against the cold.
Although Fergusson had visited France as early as 1895 it was from the turn of the twentieth century that he began to spend significant periods of time there, often in the company of Peploe with whom he embarked on sketching holidays along the north coast at Deauville, Le Touquet, Dieppe and Etaples. In Paris later in the decade he immersed himself into the café world of absinthe-fuelled gaiety. He adored the French capital and its people, its modern approach to art and the freedom of its Bohemian underworld; 'Well, I was in Paris, without money or rich relations... but repeatedly encouraged by what someone has called "le bon air de Paris, qui semble contenir les effleuves amoureuses et les emanations intellectuelles". Life was as it should be and I was very happy. The Dôme, so to speak, round the corner; l'Avenue quite near; the concert Ronge not far away - I was very much interested in music; the Luxenbourg Gardens to sketch in; Colarossi's class if I wanted to work from the model. In short, everything a young painter could want...' (Jean Geddes and Margaret Morris, Cafe Drawings in Edwardian Paris from the Sketch-Books of J D Fergusson, 1974, p. 8). He finally settled in Paris in 1907 at Boulevard Edgar Quinet with a retainer to produce illustrations of café life for an American magazine. It was in this year, the first of his permanent residence, that he painted Boulevard Montparnasse, Evening.
Fergusson was a habitué of Montparnasse in particular and often spent his afternoons and evenings at the Pre-Catalan Restaurant, the Closerie des Lilas with the Café d'Harcourt becoming a particularly favourite haunt. His circle of friends included the artists Bertha Case, Jo Davidson, Anne Estelle Rice, the poet Roffy and the mathematician and aviator La Torrie and the writers John Middleton Murray and Katherine Mansfield. He mixed freely with some of the greatest French avante-garde artists of the day such as Matisse, Derain, Delaunay and Dunoyer de Segonzac. Their common interest in exploring and developing the properties of colour, volume and line to depict how they felt about what they saw, was a driving force. Café society was central to their camaraderie; it was the meeting place of the Parisian intelligentsia. Years later Fergusson would describe the energy and attraction of the hours spent in the cafés of Paris; 'Further down the Boul Miche was the wonderful Café d'Harcourt, where they had a lively Hungarian band that used a metal tray with knives and forks and spoons on it, to reinforce, very successfully, their music. But for me the greatest attraction was the girl frequenters. They were chiefly girls employed by dressmakers and milliners and wore the things they were working at, mostly too extreme from a practical point of view, but with that touch of daring that made them very helpful - they were a great help to me... We always came down to the d'Harcourt after dinner to make sketches of these charming girls, who were quite pleased to be drawn and didn't become self-conscious or take frozen poses.' (Memoires of Peploe, in 'Scottish Art Review', 1962, vol. 8, no.3) In the early 1900s Fergusson painted a series of portraits of women in large hats and even in his street scenes he almost always included an elegant figure of a woman dress in a prominent hat.