Artists' studios & studio funds
Our firm is actively developing a specialization in the sale of artists' studios and studio holdings. These collections, often rich, coherent, and imbued with a strong intimate dimension, deserve a sensitive and tailored approach, which we strive to offer through carefully prepared thematic sales.
We support rights holders, families or collectors in the inventory, valuation and sale of works (sculpture, painting, photography, ceramics, etc.) while ensuring that the spirit of each artistic approach is respected.
We are currently preparing the sale of a collection of works by the American Impressionist painter. Theodore Earl Butler. Based in Giverny at the end of the 19th century, Butler played a central role in the exchanges between Claude Monet and the community of American painters present in the village. He successively married two of Monet's stepdaughters, Suzanne and Marthe Hoschedé. Through his daughter Lily, he is also the painter's grandfather Jean-Marie Toulgouat.
At the end of the 1880s, as the cycle of Impressionist exhibitions came to an end, the works of Claude Monet, Auguste Renoir or even Edgar Degas began to attract the attention of American collectors. At the same time, young artists from the United States settled in France, moving away from the Parisian academies to paint outdoors in villages such as Barbizon, Grez-sur-Loing, Pont-Aven or Giverny, where Monet settled in 1883.
Between 1885 and the First World War, Giverny became a true artistic hotbed. Attracted by the light, the landscapes, the conviviality of the place and the presence of Monet, many American painters developed their own version of Impressionism there. The café-épicerie des Baudy, which became a hotel, was transformed into an artistic center, with workshops, tennis courts, cuisine adapted to American tastes and regular parties.
Among the first to join Giverny, John Leslie Breck and Theodore Robinson form links with Monet, just like Lilla Cabot Perry, who stayed regularly in a neighboring house with his family between 1889 and 1909. Other artists settled there permanently, such as Guy Rose, or even the couple Mary Fairchild and Frederick MacMonnies.
After 1900, a new generation took over. Frederick Carl Frieseke and Richard E. Miller gradually moved away from Norman landscapes to turn towards the human figure, domestic scenes and gardens, developing a more decorative impressionism, influenced by impressionist light as much as by the aesthetics of Nabis.
Theodore Butler, by settling permanently in Giverny after his marriage to Suzanne Hoschedé, played a key role in the cohesion of this artistic community.
Our premises, ideally located on Place Saint-Aubin, offer a modern and bright setting, perfectly suited to showcasing the works entrusted to us, both for exhibitions and for sales.
We are at your disposal for any request for free and confidential inventory or appraisal, and we are happy to travel to workshops anywhere in France. You can contact us at the email address contact@marclabarbe.com.
