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Dimensions: measurements 18 1/4 by 10 3/4 in. alternate measurements 46.5 by 27.5 cm
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Provenance: Galerie Kahnweiler, ParisPaul Guillaume and Brandon Davis, Ltd., LondonRoger Fry, LondonMargery Fry, London (inherited from the above in 1934)Joseph Slifka, New YorkNorman Granz, Geneva (sold: Sotheby's, London, July 5, 1962, lot 257)Ernest Charles Biggins, London (acquired at the above sale and sold: Sotheby's, London, November 26, 1967, lot 81)Cumberland (acquired at the above sale)Stephen Higgons, ParisDame Elizabeth Murdoch, MelbourneAcquavella Galleries, New York Paul F. Smith (acquired in 1974)Acquavella Galleries, New YorkSaidenberg Gallery, New York (acquired from the above in 1977)Gradowczyk and Garcia Benitez CollectionHirschl & Adler Gallery, New YorkPrivate Collection (acquired from the above in 1997)Michelle Rosenfeld Gallery, New York (on consignment)Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2000
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Exhibited:
London, Mansard Gallery (Heal's), The New Movement in Art , 1917, no. 43
London, Arts Council Gallery; Nottingham, Leeds, Newcastle-upon-Tyne and Manchester, Vision and Design . The Life, Work and Influence of Roger Fry , 1966, no. 40
London, Lefevre Gallery, Important 19 υ th and 20 υ th Century Paintings , 1975, no. 4
London, The Whitechapel Art Gallery; Stuttgart, Kunstmuseum; Otterlo, Kröller-Müller Museum, Juan Gris , 1992-93, no. 37
Roslyn Harbor, The Nassau County Museum of Art, Poets and Painters , 1997
London, The Courtauld Gallery, Art made Modern: Roger Fry's Vision of Art, 1999-2000
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Literature: Douglas Cooper, Juan Gris: Catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre peint, vol. I, Paris, 1977, no. 46, illustrated p. 81Christoper Green, Juan Gris, New Haven and London, 1992, illustrated p. 195
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Notes: PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT AMERICAN COLLECTION
Gris' Cubist composition Verre, tasse, et journal was created shortly before the outbreak of the First World War. Over the course of the 1910s, several artists would attempt to adopt the perspectival and compositional devices that the Cubist founders Braque and Picasso had started using at the end of the first decade, but few would be as highly regarded for their talent and vision as Gris (see fig. 1). As a result, Gris was considered as one of the leaders of the Cubist movement, along with Picasso (see fig. 2), Braque and Léger. Recalling this period and her association with the Cubists, Gertrude Stein identified Gris as an artist of foremost importance among these cultural figures: "The only real Cubism is that of Picasso and Juan Gris. Picasso created it and Juan Gris permeated it with his clarity and exaltation" (Gertrude Stein, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, New York, 1933, p. 111) (see fig. 2). Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, Gris' dealer who was once in possession of this painting, provided the following analysis of Gris' particular Cubist style: "... [T]he emblems which Juan Gris invented 'signified' the whole of the object which he meant to represent. All the details are not present. The emblems are not comprehensible without previous visual experiences. . . The picture contains not the forms which have been collected in the visual memory of the painter, but new forms, forms which differ from those of the 'real' objects we meet within the visible world, forms which are truly emblems and which only become objects in the perception of the spectator" (Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, Juan Gris: His Life and Work, London, 1947, p. 90). Another important figure to have owned the present work was Roger Fry, the influential art critic and champion of Modernist painting. In addition to his distinction as a critic, Fry's curatorial accomplishments included a period as curator of paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and as a guest curator for the Grafton Galleries exhibition Manet and the Post-Impressionists. Fry has been credited with 'discovering' Cézanne, and is often credited as one of the principal taste makers of the early 20th century for his influence on art collectors in Great Britain and the United States. Fig. 1, Juan Gris, 1922, photograph by Man Ray, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid Fig. 2, Pablo Picasso, La bouteille et le journal, Spring 1913, pasted papers and charcoal on paper, National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin Fig. 3, Juan Gris, Jarre, Flacon et Verre, 1911, oil on canvas, Museum of Modern Art, New York Fig. 4, Juan Gris, La Table, 1914, collage and gouache on canvas, Philadelphia Museum of Art