Among the many artists and intellectuals who fled to the Netherlands during the First World War was the philosopher and professor Lucien Brulez and his Romanian wife. The refugees had regular contact with each other and the black-eyed Fortuna Brulez-Mavromati inspired Van den Berghe to paint one of his most expressionistic portraits. The artist made two variants that precede the final portrait. He also made a linocut after one of the portraits. Each variant possesses an independent quality, yet in each subsequent work there is an evolution towards a more solid structure and a greater dynamism. Repeating the same subject until the desired expression is achieved is a working method that Van den Berghe often used. The version from the Museum of Fine Arts Ghent is the first of the two 'preparatory' variants and clearly still has the character of an unfinished study, although the figure itself is almost completely worked out in heavily applied layers of paint. The Fauvist use of colour and the expressive make-up of the face can be traced back to the Russian expressionist Alexej von Jawlensky, while the female portraits of Kees van Dongen and Jan Sluijters have certainly influenced him as well. Like Jawlensky's portraits, this one transcends the simple depiction of a particular individual. It becomes an icon of the unattainable, unfathomable woman. It is the beginning of a recurring theme in which the problematic male-female relationship takes shape. Van den Berghe no longer expresses his essential problems in portraits, but in scenes in which women are depicted naked and often without their heads, sometimes with humour and mild self-mockery, but gradually with a bitterness that does not hide his disillusionment with mankind.
Artist |
Frits Van den Berghe
RKD
VIAF
Wikidata
|
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Title | Portrait of Fortuna Brulez |
Date | ca. 1919 |
Period | 20th century |
Signatures, inscriptions, and markings | signatures (names) bottom right: FVBerghe |
Collection | paintings AAT |
Object type | oil paintings (visual works) AAT |
Inventory number | 1968-AH |
Acquisition credit |
purchase
Galerie Campo Antwerp 1968 |
Current whereabouts | Work currently not on display |
Permalink | https://mskgent.be/collection/work/data/1968-AH |
IIIF Manifest | https://imagehub.mskgent.be/iiif/3/2936/manifest.json |
Art & Architecture Thesaurus |
300015637
portraits
AAT
300189808 figures (representations) AAT |
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Keywords Iconclass |
22C
light
Iconclass
22C8 shadow Iconclass 31AA2212 eyes - AA - female human figure Iconclass 31B6231 lips pressed together Iconclass 61BB2 historical persons - BB - woman Iconclass 61BB2(FORTUNA BRULEZ) historical person (FORTUNA BRULEZ) - BB - woman Iconclass |
School / Style |
Expressionist (style)
AAT
Modernist AAT |
Frits Van den Berghe 1883-1939 : Met een volledig geïllustreerde kritische en gedocumenteerde catalogus van de schilderijen, gouaches, tekeningen en illustraties / Piet Boyens, Patrick Derom, Gilles Marquenie. - Antwerpen : Pandora, 1999 (p. 31, 133-134, 151-152, 372 nr. 132 (ill.) |
200 jaar verzamelen : Collectieboek Museum voor Schone Kunsten Gent / Arnout Balis, Robert Hoozee, Maximiliaan P.J. Martens, Paul Van Haute. - Gent : Ludion, 2000 (p. 266 (ill. 163)) |
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. 204-206, cat. 54) |
Museum voor Schone Kunsten Gent : Catalogus schilderkunst ; Deel I: 14de - 18de eeuw ; Deel II: 19de - 20ste eeuw / Robert Hoozee, Johan De Smet, Bruno Fornari, Ruth Monteyne. - Gent : Museum voor Schone Kunsten Gent, 2007 (dl. II, p. 65 (ill.)) |
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. 47 (ill. p. 69)) |
Do you have any suggestions, questions or information about this work? Write us, collectie.msk@stad.gent |