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Provenance: The artist's studio.
Dr E. Mayer, Wiesbaden, by whom acquired from the artist in the 1920s, and thence by descent; sale, Sotheby's, London, 4 December 1968, lot 80 (verso).
Maurice and Vivienne Wohl, London, by whom acquired at the above sale; sale, Christie's, London, 4 February 2008, lot 4 (£2,932,500).
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Exhibited: London, Roland Browse and Delbanco, 1958.
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Literature: The artist's handlist.
C. Weiler, Jawlensky: Heads, Faces, Meditations, London, 1970, no. 80, p. 122.
M. Jawlensky, L. Pieroni-Jawlensky & A. Jawlensky, Alexej von Jawlensky: Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil Paintings, Volume Three 1934-1937, London, 1993, no. 396, verso (illustrated p. 319).
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Notes: No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.
With her rosy cheeks and petulant look up at her viewer, the girl in Mädchen mit roter Schleife appears the embodiment of youthful cheek. Alexej von Jawlensky has filled the picture with a range of incandescent colours that speak of the vitality and potential of youth. These colours, so lively and bold, form a strange contrast with the deliberately grumpy look on the girl's face, a detail that the palette begs us not to take too seriously, and that in fact adds an endearing dimension to the painting.
Mädchen mit roter Schleife was painted in 1911, the year that Jawlensky himself recalled with great pride as the most important breakthrough in his career. It was during this time that he painted his 'most powerful works, referred to as the 'pre-war works'' (Jawlensky, quoted in 'Memoir dictated to Lisa Kümmel, Wiesbaden, 1937', pp. 25-33 in M. Jawlensky, L. Pieroni-Jawlensky and A. Jawlensky, Alexej von Jawlensky: Catalogue Raisonnée of the Oil Paintings, Volume One 1890-1914, London, 1991, p. 31). Mädchen mit roter Schleife clearly falls into this category, sharing with many of the other paintings of the period the bold, Expressionistic palette (Jawlensky listed the bold colours that marked the paintings of this period: ' red, blue, orange, cadmium yellow and chromium-oxide green') and the deft simplification of forms and features in order to intensify their visual impact. This work, then, dates from the most important vintage year of Jawlensky's career, and it is clear, from the virtuosity with which he has rendered his subject, why the pictures from this period have been celebrated, both by the artist and by his critics and supporters alike.
The subject of children had featured in several of Jawlensky's pictures, as it had in the works of several of the other Expressionist painters working in Germany during this period. Often, Jawlensky would show these children holding a doll, a feature that again echoed the depictions of other artists active at that time, for instance Heckel. Here, instead of a toy-like doll-- a symbol of childhood, motherhood and a strange stand-in for the subject herself-- the young girl is shown in a sailor-like outfit. This adds a sense of both play and role-play to Mädchen mit roter Schleife, emphasising the fact that pictures are somehow artificial and thereby circumventing that problem, acknowledging and even embracing the limitations of representation in order to demonstrate that Jawlensky is not seeking merely to capture a sight, but something more...
The role of the child in the paintings of the Expressionists, a loose umbrella term covering a multitude of movements and individuals, sometimes took strange extremes, from the embodiment of innocence to the figures teetering ambiguously on the brink of sexual awareness (see Kirchner's depictions of Fränzi above). Jawlensky has shunned both of these over-simplistic routes of depiction in order to create something that is marked by a far more complex mood, a more complex personality and therefore a more complex and more rounded humanity. In the human face, Jawlensky saw a template in which all the beauty and harmony of the world was captured, a legacy in part of his Russian upbringing and of the role played by religious icons in the Orthodox church. While this aspect of the representation of the face would become codified during the years of the First World War, with works such as the Saviour's Faces and Abstrakt Heads, already in Mädchen mit roter Schleife the earlier stages of this interest can be seen. This, then, is a spiritual subject. The playful cheek, the sulkiness of the girl in her almost comical outfit, is nonetheless used by Jawlensky as an insight into life on a more metaphysical level. The colours pulse with intensity, Jawlensky tapping into the energy of existence, of the divine.
This mystical side to Jawlensky, which would result in his later series of meditative works, had already attracted a group of admirers and had resulted in the formation of the Neue Künstlervereinigung München around him and his compatriot, Kandinsky. The group attracted several Expressionist members, not least Franz Marc who, with Kandinsky, broke away from the NKVM to form the Blaue Reiter group with which Jawlensky would also come to be associated. These movements exemplified the concept of Expressionism as an art that forms an expression, rather than a mere representation-- expressive rather than expressionistic-- and this is an aspect that is perfectly embodied in Mädchen mit roter Schleife.
Mädchen mit roter Schleife was split from Hélène (Jawlensky, Pieroni Jawlensky & Jawlensky no. 396; sold Christie's, London, 4 February 2008, lot 6) as was the artist's intention per his handlist (see Alexej von Jawlensky: Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil Paintings, Volume One, 1890-1914, no. 396, p. 319).