Sonia Delaunay - Compositions, Couleurs, Idées - 1930






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Sonia Delaunay’s Compositions, Couleurs, Idées is a limited edition French portfolio from 1930, in original pictorial stiff boards, with 40 hand-colored pochoir plates on velin paper, complete with half-title and title, in very good exterior and near‑fine interior.
Description from the seller
Paris: Editions d'Art [1930], C. Moreau, Editeur, original pictorial stiff board portfolio, 33.5 x 25.5 cm, original silk ties; complete with half-title, title, and 40 hand-colored pochoir plates on velin paper, page size 32.2 x 24.5 cm. Boards show minor wear with the front board bearing a small library number, as does the title page. Interior is Near Fine, in almost perfect condition with no stamps or markings of any kind on the front or verso of the prints. The set belonged to a professional library for teachers, and the card on the inside back board (see last photo) shows no entries - the set was never circulated, which likely accounts for the superb condition.
Ukrainian-born French artist Sonia Delaunay (1885–1979) received her formal training in Russia and Germany before settling in Paris, where she became a revolutionary figure in the art world. A pioneering figure of the 20th-century avant-garde, she was celebrated for her mastery of color and the ability to dissolve the boundaries between various art forms. Deeply rooted in geometric abstraction and Orphism [focus on pure abstraction, bright, prismatic colors, and the sensory effects of light], her unique, vibrant, ever-modern designs seamlessly merged fine art with decorative and applied arts. By integrating these striking patterns across textiles, furniture, clothing, and interior design, she revolutionized the field during the 1920s and 30s.
Known as 'The Mother of Art Deco Abstraction,' Delaunay was the first living female artist to have a retrospective at the Louvre, in 1964. After her early successes, she wrote what might be regarded as her artistic credo: "Up to the present, painting has been nothing but photography in color, but the color was always used as a means of describing something. Abstract art is a beginning towards freeing the old pictorial formula. A new era of painting unfolds upon realizing that color possesses its own life, creating infinite combinations that offer a poetic language far more expressive than conventional methods. It is a mysterious language related to vibrations, the very life of color. In this area there are infinite possibilities."
Complete examples of this suite of 40 pochoirs are rare, especially in this condition, although individual sheets appear occasionally on the market.
Paris: Editions d'Art [1930], C. Moreau, Editeur, original pictorial stiff board portfolio, 33.5 x 25.5 cm, original silk ties; complete with half-title, title, and 40 hand-colored pochoir plates on velin paper, page size 32.2 x 24.5 cm. Boards show minor wear with the front board bearing a small library number, as does the title page. Interior is Near Fine, in almost perfect condition with no stamps or markings of any kind on the front or verso of the prints. The set belonged to a professional library for teachers, and the card on the inside back board (see last photo) shows no entries - the set was never circulated, which likely accounts for the superb condition.
Ukrainian-born French artist Sonia Delaunay (1885–1979) received her formal training in Russia and Germany before settling in Paris, where she became a revolutionary figure in the art world. A pioneering figure of the 20th-century avant-garde, she was celebrated for her mastery of color and the ability to dissolve the boundaries between various art forms. Deeply rooted in geometric abstraction and Orphism [focus on pure abstraction, bright, prismatic colors, and the sensory effects of light], her unique, vibrant, ever-modern designs seamlessly merged fine art with decorative and applied arts. By integrating these striking patterns across textiles, furniture, clothing, and interior design, she revolutionized the field during the 1920s and 30s.
Known as 'The Mother of Art Deco Abstraction,' Delaunay was the first living female artist to have a retrospective at the Louvre, in 1964. After her early successes, she wrote what might be regarded as her artistic credo: "Up to the present, painting has been nothing but photography in color, but the color was always used as a means of describing something. Abstract art is a beginning towards freeing the old pictorial formula. A new era of painting unfolds upon realizing that color possesses its own life, creating infinite combinations that offer a poetic language far more expressive than conventional methods. It is a mysterious language related to vibrations, the very life of color. In this area there are infinite possibilities."
Complete examples of this suite of 40 pochoirs are rare, especially in this condition, although individual sheets appear occasionally on the market.
