An almost silent portrait of a girl in bronze. So beautifully done, her serene, dreamy aura was lovingly captured by Léon Indenbaum in 1930.
The bronze was cast posthumously, with the cire perdue technic and gilded with 24 carat gold leaf.
The work is signed 'Inden', no. 4/8 and the hallmark of Fonderie Bronze du Lauragais, '. FBL'.
This work also includes an official certificate
signed by Léon Indenbaum's grandson. The work and certificate are also
registered with ADAGP (Société des authors dans les arts graphiques et
plastiques) in Paris.
The family had this sculpture cast in bronze posthumously, because
the family believes that their grandfather's sculptures should be seen,
they want to give the name Indenbaum the attention and fame it deserves,
in their opinion. Léon Indenbaum is known to connoisseurs and is
inextricably linked to the Ecole de Paris. Yet they only want to sell a
few works, to a very limited extent.
These posthumous
sculptures are therefore a first and also the last edition of a maximum
of 12. Each sculpture is numbered and officially registered, maximum 8
are numbered 1-8 and four of them are signed EA I to EA IV. (EA stands
for Epreuve d'Artiste). This is number 4/8. More examples will not be
cast either.
Biography:
Leon Indenbaum (Tcherikov, now
Belarus, 1890 - Opio, 1981), was a Russian/French sculptor who belonged
to the group of artists of the École de Paris. His art was innovative,
inspired by the classics, but also by African art, the Cubism and
Expressionism.
Léon Indenbaum grew up in the shtetl (Eastern European Jewish
village) Tcherikov, with his grandfather, who was a bookbinder of art
books. After primary school, he was educated as a woodworker. The
director of that school thought he was so talented that he arranged for
him to attend the Academy of Decorative Arts in Vilnius.
After
this training, Indenbaum wanted more and was admitted to the Imperial
Academy in Odessa. He went through it for a few years until he crossed a
wrong box on a form, he had accidentally signed for 5 years military
service in the Imperial Army.
He already had contacts with an artist friend who was in Paris, where so much was happening in the field of art.
Indenbaum managed to escape from Vilnius with the help of an engineer and arrived in Paris in March 1911.
He ended up in 'La Ruche' in Montparnasse, a kind of artists' village.
La Ruche was a circular building, it served as a wine pavilion at the
1900 World's Fair, and was rebuilt by the successful artist Alfred
Boucher. Boucher wanted to give poor artists a chance to devote
themselves completely to their art. La Ruche was a large round building
full of studio apartments, each room had the shape of a slice of pie, in
the point a space for a kitchen and storage and above the door was a
small loft where you could sleep, often such a studio also had to be
shared.
Indenbaum got a studio on the 2nd floor, next to Chagall,
who, like himself, had also just arrived from Russia. Indenbaum lived in
La Ruche until 1927.
He did have a second studio in Montparnasse for a while.
In
total, about 200 artists lived in La Ruche, many of them were from
Eastern Europe and many of them were Jewish. Some of them have become
world famous with their art, think of Chaïm Soutine, Ossip Zadkine,
Jacques Lipschitz, Chana Orloff, Michael Kikoïne, Moïse Kisling , Amadeo
Modigliani to name a few.
From 1911 to 1919, Indenbaum studied
sculpture
at the Académie La Grande Chaumière, his mentor was the sculptor and
painter Antoine Bourdelle, first as a student, later also as his
assistant.
In 1912 Indenbaum already exhibited at the Paris Salon
d'Artistes Indépendents, he was very poor and his choice of materials
was cheap. Jacques Doucet, the great art collector and famous couturier,
saw a bust of Indenbaum and summoned him to his home, he wanted the
same bust made in a different material, Indenbaum managed to get a piece
of onyx.
Doucet was very pleased and asked Indenbaum to make a
relief for his round dining room. Indenbaum received 1000 francs per month. Indenbaum had found his patron.
He
made one of his most impressive reliefs, entitled 'Musiciens et
antelopes' from 1914, made of pink onyx. It was auctioned at Christie's
in 2004 for 3.3 million euros.
Besides Jacques Doucet, the
couturier René Poiret, the bankers George and Marcel Bénard and the
decorator, designer and collector Marcel Coard were regular customers of
Léon Indenbaum's sculptures and reliefs.
Léon fell in love with Céline Hénin, she became his muse and his
wife, at the end of 1914 they had a daughter, Dinah. Indenbaum was doing
well. He had many friends, such as the artists Chaim Soutine, Amadeo
Modigliani, with whom he also shared a studio for a period, Tsuguharu
Foujita, Chana Orloff, Michael Kikoïne, and Diego Rivera.
Amadeo
Modigliani and Diego Rivera both portrayed Indenbaum in 1913 and 1916.
Indenbaum himself also portrayed several of his friends. It was the
happiest period of his life.
With the stock market crash of 1929,
life became much more difficult, people lost their fortunes and could
no longer afford works of art. The political situation in France also
changed.
The artists from La Ruche and Montparnasse were mostly
migrants, at the Paris Salon they were not allowed to exhibit their work
among the French artists, an art critic, André Warnod, had given them
the nickname 'École de Paris', to show that this innovative avant-garde
garde art was also French art. In the 1930s this name was used
derogatoryly, they were looked down upon, their art was called depraved
and because many of them were Jewish, there was also anti-Semitism. They
were ignored in the press and in the late 1930s they were no longer
allowed to exhibit.
Some artists went abroad. When the war broke out, many had to flee or
go into hiding. Indenbaum also had to leave Paris in a hurry. He found a
hiding place in a village in the Seine et Marne, where he always got
his clay. He was lucky and survived the war, more than 60 percent of the
Jewish artists in La Ruche died in the camps.
After the war, Indenbaum settled in Paris again. His
studio
had been looted and what was left was sometimes destroyed. He lived a
very withdrawn life. He had already been separated from Céline before
the war, his daughter lived in the south of France. His friends had
either not survived the war or had become much too commercial in his
view.
He never wanted to commit to a gallery, he felt that he sold
his soul, his independence as an artist was at stake, the result was
that he was ignored by a large part of the art world. His now famous
friends had signed and they were doing well.
Indenbaum wanted nothing more than to work in complete freedom, but in doing so he made it very difficult for him self. He also refused, for example, major commissions from the French state for work on monuments and facades of special buildings.
He was, however, one of the founders of the "Groupe des neuf", a
group of nine sculptors who gathered on November 11, 1963 at the statue
of Balzac on Avenue Raspail, made by Auguste Rodin. It was a tribute.
They
wanted to create a monument to French post-war figurative
sculpture at a time when American art was beginning to take over. The
'Groupe des neuf' consisted of Jean Carton, Paul Cornet, Raymond Corbin,
Marcel Damboise, Léon Indembaum, Léopold Kretz, Raymond Martin, Gunnar
Nilsson
and Jean Osouf.
It was a success, there were several exhibitions ofthe group, including in Musée Rodin, a total of 22 sculptors joined the
group.
In 1968 Indenbaum received the prestigious Prix de sculpture Georges
Wildenstein, from the Institut de France, for his entire oeuvre. In the
same year he decided to move to his daughter in Opio. He died at the age
of 91. A long life entirely devoted to creating art.
Léon
Indenbaum's work can be seen in various museums, including in the United
States, Switzerland, Russia, Belarus, Israel and of course in France.
Sometimes his work is also auctioned at the major auction houses such as
Christies, Sotheby's and MacDougall in London.
Literature and sources:
- Family of Indenbaum
- Jeanine Warnod; "Les artistes de
Montparnasse, la Ruche", Éditions Mayer-Van Wilder, Paris 1988. P.42-47,
8, 87,96, 104, 159, 162, 170, 192.
- Nieszawer & Princ;
"Histoires des artistes Juifs de l'École de Paris, 1905-1939", Édition
Les Étoiles, 2020. P. 190-192, 515 and 516.
- Jeanine Warnod; "l'École de Paris", Édition Musée du Montparnasse, 2012. P. 239, 240 and 243.
-
"Chagall, Modigliani, Soutine.... Paris pour école, 1905-1940",
Éditions Musée d'Art et d'Histoire du Judaïsme (MAHJ), Paris, 2020 et
Réunion des Musée nationaux, Grand Palais, 2020. P. 8, 11, 49, 66, 68,
69, 228, 230, 252.
- G. Annenkoff; "Art Russe Modern
Excellent
Material:
Gilded bronze
Measurements:
Width: 27 cm
(10,63")
Height: 34 cm
(13,39")
Depth: 20 cm
(7,87")
Period:
Original plaster 1930
Origin:
France
Artist / atelier:
Léon Indenbaum,