GEORGES BRAQUE,
LE CHAR (CONDUCTRICE III), 1934


GEORGES BRAQUE
Le Char (conductrice III)

signed, lower right GBRAQUE

oil and charcoal on canvas
10.6 x 20.4 in. / 23 x 51.7 cm
painted in 1934

Provenance:
● Estate of the artist
● Private collection, France
● Private collection, Belgium (circa 1965)
● Christie's New York: Saturday, May 14, 2022 [Lot 00901]
Impressionist and Modern Works on Paper and Day Sale


COMPARATIVE PAST AUCTIONS

  • Georges Braque, Le char (Conductrice III) 
    Medium : oil on canvas
    Year of Work : 1934
    Size : Height 10.6 in.; Width 16.1 in. / Height 27 cm.; Width 41 cm.
    signed 'G Braque' (lower right)

    Sale of : Christie's New York: Saturday, May 14, 2022 [Lot 00901]
    Impressionist and Modern Works on Paper and Day Sale 
    Estimate : 50,000 - 70,000 USD
    Sold For : 63,000 USD Premium

    Provenance :
    Estate of the artist.
    Private collection, France (by descent from the above).
    Private collection, Belgium (gift from the above, circa 1965).
    Acquired by the present owner, 2009. 

    source : ARTNET.COM

  • Georges Braque, Nu couché au guéridon 
    Medium : oil on Canvas 
    Year of Work : 1931 
    Size : Height 9.4 in.; Width 16.1 in. / Height 24 cm.; Width 41 cm. 

    Sale of : Christie's New York: Wednesday, November 7, 2001 [Lot 00256]
    Impressionist and Modern Art (Day Sale) 
    Estimate : 90,000 - 120,000 USD 
    Sold For : 182,000 USD Premium 

    source : ARTNET.COM

  • Georges Braque, Thésée 
    Medium : oil on panel 
    Year of Work : 1931 
    Size :Height 9.2 in.; Width 13.1 in. / Height 23.3 cm.; Width 33.4 cm. 
    Stamped 

    Sale of : Sotheby's London: Wednesday, February 6, 2008 [Lot 00534]
    Impressionist and Modern Art Day Sale 
    Estimate : 25,000 - 35,000 GBP (49,115 - 68,762 USD) 
    Sold For : 43,700 GBP Premium (85,854 USD) 

    source : ARTNET.COM

Le char (conducrice lll)

Nu couché au guéridon

Thésée

source : ARTNET.COM


DOCUMENTATION

GEORGES BRAQUE, Le Char (conductrice III), 1934

This 1934 piece speaks directly to an earlier set of Braque’s works, completed between 1932 and 1935. ‘In 1931, vendor and writer, Ambroise Volland, commissioned Braque to illustrate a book of his choosing. Braque suggested one of his preferred works, Theogony, 7th century BC Greek poet Hesiod’s grand-oeuvre. The account, dedicated to the origins of the universe and the gods, is among Greek mythology’s apex works. Between 1932 and 1935, Braque produced a set of sixteen etchings, ultimately published by Maeght in 1955.’1.

This canvas was composed using oils and charcoal; it depicts a horse and chariot moving with intent. Although the frame of reference is that of Antiquity, the work’s style is very modern: simplified, abstract forms, little in the way of light-dark contrast (which would have served to play with volume) and more or less uniform areas of green, blue and brown. The lines – used for contouring and to represent the reins – highlight the relationship between the background and the ‘figures’. In addition, the pale-blue background (suggestive of sea or sky) makes the figures stand out very clearly within the painting.

There is one other artistic aspect of this work to notice: the oval frame surrounding the painting is itself painted on. Braque more or less uniformly applies this section around the central image; it is, therefore, not a frame but plays on – or in any case imitates – the idea of a frame. In this respect, we are very clearly in the realm of Modern Art: Braque is not afraid to integrate the frame into the painting, inverting our expectation of it. As a result, we do not know if it is the painting that becomes the frame or the frame that becomes (part of) the painting. The oval demarcates the painting, replacing the physical object of a frame and functioning as an outline. In so doing, it becomes a founding part of the work’s own autonomy. This painted, oval area is, in effect, playing the role of frame: it is both a human construct (the viewer understands that it is supposed to ‘be the frame’) and a facilitator for human viewing (it clarifies the difference between the part that is the image and the part that is outside of that). It is thanks to this outlining area that we understand that what we are seeing is a ‘precious’ object that needs protecting – a painting.

Georges Braque’s Post Cubist Masterpieces, Anthem Edition, 2024.