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  • Les vieilles marches (the ancient steps)

       
    Aubusson tapestry woven by the Four workshop. With label, n°EA2/2. Circa 1980.
          Toffoli produced a large number of tapestries in collaboration with the Robert Four workshop from 1976 onwards, designing several hundred cartoons. In them we find post-cubist transparent effects which are characteristic of the artist, as indeed are the subjects treated. But while Toffoli is a painter-traveller, he also sometimes takes an interest in less exotic subjects : old stones in a French village, for example.    
  • Musique de chambre (chamber music)

     
       
    Aubusson tapestry woven by the Pinton workshop for the Compagnie des Arts Français. 1940.
        A painter and engraver, Lucien Coutaud also worked in the theatre with Dullin, Barrault and designed numerous sets and costumes. However it was his encounter with Marie Cuttoli  in 1933 which would introduce him to tapestry : she mainly commissioned seat cover designs. Most of the tapestries that followed were woven in the Pinton workshop for the Compagnie des Arts Français, whose main aim was to integrate tapestry as an element of interior decoration. The last 3 tapestries designed by the artist in 1960 are a tribute to his notoriety because “Jardins exotiques” was chosen to decorate the 1st class saloon on the “France” transatlantic liner.Elements of his work as a set designer, influenced by surrealism, are discernible in Coutaud’s woven art : the world he illustrates is figurative yet stylised (shapes are angular and harsh) contained in a dream world often incorporating unusual borders.     ‘Musique de chambre» seems a world away from the war’s grim times : the menacing sharp-edged designs of the later tapestries are not yet present  but the artist's leitmotivs of onirism, beauty of the faces, and vegetal decoration on the borderes are already asserting themselves. A copy of the tapestry was included in the 1946 exhibition.     Bibliography : L’amour de l’art, la tapisserie Française, 1946, ill. p.181 Collectif, Muraille et laine, éditions pierre Tisné, 1946, plate 55 Jean Lurçat, Tapisserie française, Bordas, 1947, plate 34 Exhibition catalogue Lucien Coutaud, œuvre tissé, Aubusson, Musée Départemental de la Tapisserie, 1988-1989, illustrated p 17
  • La crique (the cove)

       
    Aubusson tapestry woven in the Pinton workshop. 1959.
        As a young painter moving towards abstraction in the late 40s, Longobardi was commissioned to paint large-scale murals in France and abroad (the presidency of the Republic of Abidjan, the rectorate of the Poitiers Academy, etc.), as well as numerous tapestry cartoons, in particular for the Manufactures Nationales, with sometimes very modern subjects (‘l'autostrade’, ‘l'aéroport’, etc.). Longobardi, along with Singier and Springer, was one of the very first abstract artists to receive public commissions at the time. Although his work was abstract, his aesthetic evolved over time, from sharp forms to a more lyrical style full of movement, until the appeasement of the 1960s. The high point of his meteoric official career came when he was commissioned to create ‘la crique’ for the starboard private dining room of the liner ‘France’. After this, the artist became much rarer.   Our tapestry bears witness to a marine inspiration that is not so frequent on the liner "France", and which, moreover, remained on the borderline between Abstraction (his usual mode of expression) and Figuration. It was sold under number 170 in the Loudmer sale of 10.7.1983, ‘Œuvres d'art du France’.   Provenance : liner "France"   Bibliography : Cat. Expo. Le Mobilier National et les Manufactures Nationales des Gobelins et de Beauvais sous la IVe République, Beauvais, Galerie de la Tapisserie, 1997 Armelle Bouchet-Mazas, le paquebot France, éditions Norma, 2006, ill.p.170 Cat. Expo. Le chic ! Arts décoratifs et mobilier de 1930 à 1960, Paris, galerie des Gobelins, 2022-23
  • Les beaux jours (fine weather)

       
    Aubusson tapestry woven in the Henry workshop. With signed label, n°2/6. Circa 1980.
            Odette Caly, who specialised in the depiction of bouquets, designed numerous cartoons for Aubusson, woven in the Pinton, Henry or Hamot workshops. Her inspiration, typically using meadow flowers, is here emphasised by the use of a border which refers back to the historical tapestry tradition.     Bibliography : Caly, Publications filmées d’art et d’histoire, 1972
  • Composition

       
    Tapestry woven by the artist. With signed label, and preparatory drawing. Circa 1980.
       
    A versatile artist, Laborie has been designing and weaving himself in his workshop in Cornac in the Lot region for around fifty years, using material effects, relief, etc., in an approach similar to that of the protagonists of the ‘New Tapestry’ movement.
  • Eveil du jour (Awakening of the day)

       
    Aubusson tapestry woven in the Pinton workshop. With label, n°1/1. Circa 1980.
          Michel Degand, is an artist who expresses himself in many different media (painting, sculpture, illustration,…) and who has in 50 creative years, conceived  over a hundred tapestry cartoons, whose inspiration is perpetually evolving, sometimes dreamlike or cosmic (reminiscent of Wogensky), at other times « technological » (like Millecamps), often lyrical, with a marked interest in the material itself, and most of his work has been woven in the Pinton workshop at Felletin.   In this respect, our cartoon is a synthesis of these different modes of expression; we can add to it a study on geometry, on material and its chromatic effects, , on depth and relief, on empty space in a wide format, etc.  
  • Le clown (the clown)

       
    Aubusson tapestry woven by the Hecquet workshop. With signed label, n°1/1. 1974.
     
     
    Best known for his compositions inspired by the theme of the Circus (his favourite theme, across all techniques: a sculpted acrobat figure adorns the public space in Aubusson), Cinquin, who moved to Aubusson and taught at the Ecole Nationale d’Art Décoratif there until it closed, was (he died in 2019) one of the last artists to have known personally the protagonists of the movement for the renaissance of modern tapestry.
  • Lente approche (slow approach)

     
     
    Aubusson tapestry woven in the Braquenié workshop. With label. Circa 1960.
         
    From his long artistic career, which began in the 1950s (and which later focused mainly on sculpture), Julien produced around twenty tapestries from 1959 onwards, mainly woven by the Braquenié factory, including ‘Le commerce extérieur’ (Foreign Trade), a spectacular 12 m² public commission. His style often features female figures drawn in black, with sober colours and patterns, of which our cartoon is a prime example.     Bibliography : Léon-Louis Sosset, Tapisserie contemporaine en Belgique, Perron, 1989  

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