All posts tagged: Raisonné

Eva Gonzalès’s Legacy Is Being Rewritten Through a Catalogue Raisonné

Eva Gonzalès’s Legacy Is Being Rewritten Through a Catalogue Raisonné

The French painter Eva Gonzalès, much like her mentor, Édouard Manet, did not personally identify as an Impressionist, nor did she participate in the group’s exhibitions.  Her velvety brushstrokes were faithful to the human form, indulged no illusion of perspective, and stated a belief that the female mind was a landscape in its own right—wild, deep, and worthy of veneration. In her 1874 A Loge at the Théâtre des Italiens, an operagoer, one glove missing, leans over a banister, fair skin radiant against the void.   Related Articles Yet search Gonzalès online and she is almost always grouped with three female contemporaries—Mary Cassatt, Marie Bracquemond, and Berthe Morisot—as painters of unmistakably Impressionist sensibility. They were even billed as the “Four Grandes Dames” in a major 2024 survey tied to the anniversary of the movement at the National Gallery of Ireland. The misnomer has defined, and confined, the painter’s legacy in the nearly two centuries after her death.  Maybe it’s a willful misreading, driven by museum sales or the consequences of woefully outdated scholarship, since Gonzalès’s sole catalogue raisonné appeared in 1990. An update is long overdue, according to the Wildenstein Plattner Institute (WPI), a leading publisher of digital catalogues raisonnés specializing in European artists active from the 18th through the 20th centuries. Last month, …

Institut Restellini’s Modigliani Catalogue Raisonné to Release April 21

Institut Restellini’s Modigliani Catalogue Raisonné to Release April 21

After over 40 years in the making, Institut Restellini’s Amedeo Modigliani catalogue raisonné will finally release next month. Pace will host a book launch at its London gallery on April 21, with a day-long symposium to follow on April 30 at Pace’s 540 West 25th Street space in New York. To say the publication is a labor of love for Marc Restellini, Modigliani scholar and founder of the Institut, would be an understatement. At six volumes and over 2,000 pages, with 100 works newly confirmed as authentic, half of which are already in major museum collections, including the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the catalogue raisonné seems poised to redefine the field of authentication, or at least Restellini hopes so. Related Articles “I would like our approach to become the standard,” Restellini told ARTnews. “I hope that with this catalogue people will see what can be achieved. My hope is that after this catalogue, people will say, ‘This is really the right method.’” Restellini’s team combined various scientific …