Description:

Chagall Marc

Marc Chagall ALS Regarding Exhibition of Work in America and at the "Salon des Independants"

 

1p ALS inscribed overall in French and signed by Russian-French artist Marc Chagall (1887-1985) as "Marc Chagall" in bottom right corner. Signature is bold and confident, with looping "g" and exuberant "l." The pale blue paper is in near fine to very good condition, with expected paper folds and isolated foxing. Marginal mounting traces at top verso. The letter is partly dated January 21. The page measures 8.25" x 10.5."

 

Marc Chagall penned this note to French art dealer Berthe Weill (1865-1951):

 

"Dear Mademoiselle Weil [sic,

 

I hope that you are well after receiving all the world's good well-wishes. One will cherish the good memory of that gay evening inspired as it was with your good humor.

 

I would like to request that if the buyer of my last painting permits me, I will exhibit it at the retrospective exposition of the Salon of Independent Artists. I don't have paintings at my house  - everything is currently exhibited, the majority in America, several others a little everywhere, and after all people said that it is a good painting worthy of being exhibited.

 

I would be very grateful if you would give me news.

 

Our best wishes,

Marc Chagall."

 

Berthe Weill, a rare female Parisian art gallery owner, exhibited the work of unknowns who would later become the world's most famous modern artists: Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Amadeo Modigliani, Georges Braque, Juan Gris, Diego Rivera, and Raoul Dufy. She promoted the work of young, experimental, international, and female artists affiliated with the Fauvist and Cubist schools. Weill apparently regarded Marc Chagall's art as too avant-garde even for her taste, but this letter indicates that she served as his agent at one time.

 

The Salon of Independent Artists was active between 1884-1914. A type of "Salon des Refuses", it was an alternate venue for the display of artists' work considered too revolutionary for acceptance by the Academy. Chagall participated in the 1912 Salon. He also exhibited his work at several retrospective expositions in 1924 and 1933 in Paris and Basel respectively.

 

Marc Chagall was an abstract Russian-French artist who embraced all media from paintings, prints, and ceramics to stained glass, tapestries, and stage sets. Chagall's work is characterized by its dreamlike and colorful abstract representations of daily life, like his "Paris Through the Window" (1913).

 

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