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  • Raoul Dufy
    Jun 3, 1877 - Mar 23, 1953
  • Le Casino - Raoul Dufy was a French artist and designer whose paintings and prints portrayed leisure activities and urban landscapes. His distinctive style is characterized by bright colours thinly spread over a white ground, with objects sketchily delineated by sensuously undulating lines. Dufy took as his subjects scenes of recreation and spectacle, including horse races, regattas, parades, and concerts.
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Le Casino
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  • Le Casino

  • Raoul Dufy
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  • 1906
    Oil on canvas
    23 5/8 x 28 1/2 in. (60 x 72.5 cm.)
    Private collection.

    By 1905, Raoul Dufy had been painting for nearly a decade in an Impressionist idiom, rendering the nuances of the northern light around his hometown of Le Havre in muted, pastel tones, much as Boudin and Monet, two other natives of Le Havre, had done before him. But in March of that year, shortly before his twenty-eighth birthday, Dufy experienced a revelation. At the Salon des Indépendants, he was awestruck by Matisse’s Luxe, calme, et volupté (Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris), with its boldly subjective organization of pure color. “At the sight of that picture,” he recalled, “I understood the new raison d’être of painting, and Impressionist realism lost all its charm for me as I looked at this miracle of creative imagination at work in color and line. I immediately grasped the mechanics of art” (quoted in M. Giry, Fauvism: Origins and Development, New York, 1982, p. 135).

    Back in Le Havre, Dufy put these lessons to work in his own art, introducing more vibrant and expressive color into his trademark coastal scenes. “Until then I had created beaches in the Impressionist style, and I had reached the saturation point with them,” he explained. “[Now] I began to examine my tubes of paint and brushes. With these how can I attain not only what I see but that which is, that which exists for me, my reality?” (quoted in J. Freeman, The Fauve Landscape, exh. cat., Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1990, p. 94). The sensational Salon d’Automne of 1905–at which the critic Louis Vauxcelles bestowed upon Matisse and his cohorts the derisive sobriquet Les Fauves (“The Wild Beasts”)–confirmed to Dufy that he was on the right path, and by early the next year he was working in a full-blown Fauve manner, applying pure, unmodulated pigments in bold, impetuous strokes.

    Dufy painted the present canvas in the summer of 1906, at the very height of the Fauve moment. While many of his Fauve colleagues opted to go south for the season (Matisse to Collioure, for example, and Derain to L’Estaque), Dufy remained in his native Normandy, painting alongside Marquet at Le Havre, Trouville, Honfleur, Dieppe, and Fécamp. Unlike the Midi, this was the Impressionists’ home turf, which Dufy now consciously re-interpreted with brilliantly heightened color. Here, he depicts the Casino Marie-Christine at Sainte-Adresse, a resort suburb of Le Havre, appealingly situated on a high coastal bluff just three miles north of the city center. Although Dufy had painted the casino’s wooden jetty and bathing beach repeatedly since 1901 (Laffaille, nos. 52-60, 132-133), this is his earliest known depiction of the building itself, with its oblong footprint, columnar arcade, and high surmounting dome; he would paint the casino three more times in a cubist idiom between 1910 and 1912 (Laffaille, nos. 319-320, 322).

    In the present Casino, Dufy seems to revel in the freedom and excitement of his newfound Fauve technique. The sky is a broad plane of highly saturated blue, rendered all the more intense by its juxtaposition to the creamy white expanse of the building fa?ade and the vermillion stripes of the flags. These flat, even passages of color contrast with the exuberant variety of strokes–hatch marks, arcs, squiggles, and circles–that Dufy uses to describe the bustling crowd of parasol-toting vacationers in the foreground. “He applied his colors unmixed onto the canvas as if in a feverish hurry, striving to convey his emotions as simply and directly as possible,” Marcel Giry has concluded. “The blots of primary colors run over the picture surface like the scrawl of an agitated handwriting or the notes of a passionate symphony” (op. cit., 1982, p. 135).

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Other paintings by Raoul Dufy:

Royal Ascot
Royal Ascot
Reception
Reception
Epsom, the Race (Epsom, la course)
Epsom, the Race (Epsom, la course)
Large Orchestra (Grand orchestre)
Large Orchestra (Grand orchestre)
Raoul DufyRaoul Dufy was a French artist and designer whose paintings and prints portrayed leisure activities and urban landscapes. He created airy washes of light and shade, into which he would draw bold calligraphic brushstrokes. The artist's experimental use of color was influenced both by Claude Monet and his Fauvist peer Henri Matisse. “Blue is the only color which maintains its own character in all its tones it will always stay blue,” the artist mused. “Whereas yellow is blackened in its shades, and fades away when lightened; red when darkened becomes brown, and diluted with white is no longer red, but another color—pink.” Born June 3, 1877 in Le Havre, France, he enrolled in night classes at the École des Beaux-Arts before studying under Léon Bonnat at the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts on a scholarship. Dufy first encountered Fauvism at the Salon des Indépendants in 1905, after which he adapted the style to serve his own artistic purposes. During his life, the artist traveled both abroad and within France, painting views of the Mediterranean city of Nice, as well as scenes of horse races and regattas. Throughout the 1920s, Dufy worked in a variety of materials, producing ceramics, tapestry hangings, and large-scale architectural decorations. His commission for the 26th Venice Biennale won him the International Grand Prix for painting in 1952, a year before his death on March 23, 1953 in Forcalquier, France. Today, the artist’s works are held in the collections of the Musée d’Orsay in Paris, the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, The Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Art Institute of Chicago.