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The River, 1913

  • pastel (material), watercolour, cardboard
  • 700 x 900 mm
  • Inv. 1960-K

Public Domain

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In 1908, the dancing mermaid, born from the foam of the sea, appeared in Spilliaert's oeuvre for the first time, but it was only from 1910 onwards that the earthly bathing star began to fascinate him as a compositional theme in its own right. Initially, the bather still belonged to the legendary apparitions. She appears as a silhouette precariously balanced on a breakwater post or as an imploring priestess with a cup in her hand, sealing the union with the flowing water element. Spilliaert gradually discerns a worldly appearance in this mythical woman. The sketchbook that he started using in April 1910 is not only full of studies of fishermen's wives in wide skirts, but also of drawings of a naked bathing woman. A careful study of the theme of the bather reveals that Spilliaert's main interest is in the anonymous seated bather. It is not the depiction of the seductive female nude that fascinates him, as some of his contemporaries do, so he does not work from a live model. After these first compositions from 1910, in which a standing or seated bather provocatively confronts the sea, Spilliaert increasingly prefers the pose of a crouching woman supporting herself on her hands and knees. That even such a simple, seemingly submissive pose can contain a highly refined body expression is proven by the studies, whose rhythmic lines show a strong affinity with Japanese ink drawings. Between 1910 and 1913, a dozen variants were created in which the woman is either clearly in the foreground in full light, or stands out as a dramatic dark silhouette against a bright afternoon or evening sun. To us, Spilliaert's bather is inseparably linked with the sea. She is intimately united with the liquid element, while she stares at her reflection in the flooded sand and her wrists and knees are rinsed by the water. In other compositions, he is crouching on a dune, looking at the tide line with his head held high or bowed. On closer inspection, the squatting nude of the Ghent collection is more than a bather calmly gazing at the sea. In fact, the water element represented here is not an infinite vast sea but a limited watercourse. This explains the inscription that Spilliaert himself painted on the protective cardboard: Le Fleuve. This description must therefore be accepted as the title of the work. The naked woman is depicted here as a symbol of a stream, resting on a rock on the shore. Her majestic silhouette catches the last of the sunlight, which is partially obscured by dark evening clouds. It is not the only time that Spilliaert evokes another reality with a metaphorical image. Spring, for example, is a title that he repeatedly uses for a wide range of images.

Artist

Léon Spilliaert RKD VIAF Wikidata
Ostend 1881 - Brussels 1946
draftsmen (artists)AAT

Title The River
Date 1913
Period 20th century
Signatures, inscriptions, and markings signature and year bottom right: L. Spilliaert 1913
inscription, signature and year: XXI Le Fleuve Léon Spilliaert Ostende 1913 [autograaf] Neergehurkte baadster [vreemde hand]
Collection print room
Object type watercolour AAT
pastels (visual works) AAT
Inventory number 1960-K
Acquisition credit long-term loan
Vlaamse Gemeenschap
Brussels
1960
Current whereabouts Work currently not on display
Permalink https://mskgent.be/collection/work/data/1960-K
IIIF Manifest https://imagehub.mskgent.be/iiif/3/2654/manifest.json
Art & Architecture Thesaurus 300189808 figures (representations) AAT
300117546 seascapes AAT
300015636 landscapes AAT
Keywords Iconclass 21D water (one of the four elements) Iconclass
23R13 evening Iconclass
24A21 dusk, evening twilight Iconclass
25H1 landscapes in the temperate zone Iconclass
25H2 landscapes with waters, waterscapes, seascapes (in the temperate zone) Iconclass
25H213 river Iconclass
25H217 river bank Iconclass
25H23 sea (seascape) Iconclass
25H2311 wave Iconclass
25H2322 sea Iconclass
25H2322(NORTH SEA) sea (NORTH SEA) Iconclass
26A clouds Iconclass
31A234 squatting, crouching figure Iconclass
31A72 female sex; woman Iconclass
31AA the (nude) human figure; 'Corpo humano' (Ripa) - AA - female human figure Iconclass
31AA545 taking a bath - AA - in the open air Iconclass
31D15 adult woman Iconclass
School / Style Symbolism (artistic concept) AAT
Leon Spilliaert in zijn tijd / Francine-Claire Legrand. - Tielt : Uitgeverij Lannoo, 1981 (p. 205, nr. 138)
Museum voor Schone Kunsten Gent : Tekeningen, pastels en aquarellen; Inventaris / Moniek Nagels. - Gent : Museum voor Schone Kunsten Gent, 1988 (p. 48)
200 jaar verzamelen : Collectieboek Museum voor Schone Kunsten Gent / Arnout Balis, Robert Hoozee, Maximiliaan P.J. Martens, Paul Van Haute. - Gent : Ludion, 2000 (p. 273 (ill. 157))
D'Ensor à Magritte dans les collections du Musée de Gand (exposition Lodève, Musée de Lodève-Hôtel du Cardinal de Fleury, 19 novembre 2004 - 27 février 2005) / Maïthé Vallès-Bled, Robert Hoozee, Johan De Smet, Helke Lauwaert, Bruno Fornari. - Lodève : Musée de Lodève, 2004 ; Milano : Mazzotta, 2004 (p. 135-137, cat. 34)
Belgische schone : Ensor tot Magritte ; Hoogtepunten uit de verzameling van het Museum voor Schone Kunsten Gent (tentoonstelling Laren, Singer Laren, 16.06 - 30.08.2015) / Johan De Smet, Jan Rudolph De Lorm. - Gent : Museum voor Schone Kunsten Gent, 2015 ; Laren : Singer Laren, 2015 ; Heule : Uitgeverij Snoeck, 2015 (cat. 23 (ill. p. 44))
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