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Claude LevyClaude-Levy Cast Iron Sculpture of Flora, Dated 19251925
1925
About the Item
Claude-Lévy, 1895 – 1942
Alice Nikitina in the role of Flora, from the Dukelsky/Braque production of the ballet Zephyr & Flore at the Ballets Russes, 1925
Cast Stone
Signed and dated: Claude-Levy 1925 on rear face of self-base.
The present sculpture is as rare as it is delightful. Mademoiselle Claude-Levy, as the
catalogues of the period list her, was one of the truly original talents of the Art Deco period. Painter, architect, decorator, and sculptor, she was a friend of the Parisian, Modernist sculptors, Chana Orloff, Henri Laurens and the Martel brothers, to whom her work was often compared. The ingenuity of her models brought her great critical acclaim, but she seems to have stopped producing in the early 1930s. Her output, although fine, is rare. Claude-Levy’s gentle Cubism might be better described as Purism in sculpture. It is characterized by simplified surfaces, rounded (as opposed to angular) forms, and smooth, lustrous surfaces. The Purist movement included the painters Léger, Ozenfant and Le Corbusier in its ranks.
Claude-Lévy, along with other artists of the avant- garde living in the Gallic capital (Czaky, Zadkine, Archipenko, Lipchitz, Lambert Rucki Miklos, Nadelman, Vörös, Orloff) helped to develop a collective twentieth century figurative sculptural idiom that exploited the daring and rich possibilities of geometric abstraction.
The present work is Claude-Lévy’s Commedia dell’Arte figures inspired by the Stravinsky/Picasso Ballet Pulcinella, produced by Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes in 1920, with music after Pergolesi and choreography by Léonid Massine. The neo-classical idiom of the piece jibed perfectly with the tenets of the Purist Movement, with its formal clarity, easy accessibility and refreshing immediacy. The figure of Flora was inspired by the ballet Flore et Zéphyr, a collaboration between Braque and the composer Dukelsky (later known in America as Vernon Duke.)
Claude-Lévy was a star talent in Primavera’s stable, an atelier established by the department store Printemps. It engaged the best artists of the day to create a line of luxurious decorative objects for wealthy patrons. Realized in extremely limited quantities, works produced by Primavera number among the finest and most sumptuous productions of the Art Déco period.
Featured at the Primavera Pavilion, Claude-Lévy won a Grand Prix at the landmark Exposition International des Arts Décoratifs of 1925. Her vitrine of ceramics of decorated white enamel was also favorably noticed at the Salon d’Automne of 1929. At the Salon des Artistes Indépendants and at the Salon des Tuileries, she exhibited her paintings of Modernist inspiration, one of which, executed in 1926, was acquired by the French State.
- Creator:Claude Levy (1895 - 1942)
- Creation Year:1925
- Dimensions:Height: 20.87 in (53 cm)Width: 11.03 in (28 cm)Depth: 7.88 in (20 cm)
- Medium:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:New York, NY
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU2157212758382
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