LIMITED EDITION OF VOLLARD’S CÉZANNE, SIGNED BY VOLLARD, WITH AN ORIGINAL ETCHING BY CÉZANNE
(CÉZANNE, Paul) VOLLARD, Ambroise. Paul Cézanne. Paris: Vollard, 1914. Folio (10-1/2 by 13-1/2 inches), contemporary half blue morocco gilt, inlaid wooden boards (original wrappers bound in), uncut.
Signed limited first edition, one of only 150 copies on Japon paper (of a total edition of 1,000), this copy labeled “Exemplaire d’Auteur” and signed by Vollard, with an original etching entitled “Tête de Femme” by Cézanne. Bound with inlaid wooden boards by B.A. Martin.
In 1893 Henri-Louis-Ambroise Vollard established himself as an “amateur-merchant,” and opened a gallery on Rue Laffitte, at the center of the Parisian art market. Regarded as one of the most important dealers in French contemporary art at the beginning of the 20th century, this “shrewd patron and publisher” shaped the careers of such groundbreaking artists as Cézanne, Maillol, Bonnard, Matisse, Renoir, Picasso, Rouault, Gauguin and Van Gogh. Vollard “was first and foremost an art dealer, not an art collector. His discerning eye helped him to recognize talent and organize significant exhibitions” (Art Institute of Chicago). He arranged Cézanne’s first one-man show—“possibly the most important exhibition of the 1890s. Cézanne’s work was virtually unknown in Paris at the time, and Vollard took a significant financial risk in showcasing the 150 paintings that he displayed. The exhibition proved to be a success; many of the works sold, Cézanne’s place in the pantheon of modern art was firmly established, and Vollard soon became the leading contemporary art dealer of his generation… playing a key role in shaping the history of modern art” (Metropolitan Museum of Art). This is Vollard’s biography of Cézanne, lavishly illustrated. Text in French. The original Cézanne etching was undoubtedly struck posthumously from the original plate. See Freitag 1905.
A near-fine copy, with only light soiling to bound-in original wrappers.