1963.171 Guy Pène Du Bois, Costume Dance


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Born in New York in 1884, Guy Pène Du Bois was of aristocratic ancestry. He studied painting with Robert Henri, but it was as a student in Paris that he achieved the style he used so effectively as a weapon with which to puncture complacency of mediocre people, the vulgar, rich, and foolish. Du Bois, along with John Sloan, George Bellows, and Edward Hopper, is often considered an upholder of a renovated and simplified realism in American art. Chester Dale, the donor of this and another Du Bois painting in the Dallas Museum of Art collection, was a key supporter of the artist's career.

Adapted from
DMA Acquisition proposal (Chester Dale Gifts), 1963.

NOTES
Added geographies to the artist record- see 1945.11

Add exhibition:
"New York Realists," Whitney Museum of American Art, February 9-March 5, 1937

Added probable acquisition proposal to TMS record as text entry (because I do not have editing privileges to the Registration module).

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers
Guy Pène Du Bois

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials
oil
panel

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms
performers
figures
realism
theater
costumes
sitting
standing
backstage
clown

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
By 1937- d.1962: Chester Dale (d.1962), New York, NY [1] 
1962-1963: Chester Dale Estate
1963: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, bequest from the above [2]

[1] This owner appears on the documentation from "New York Realists" exhibition at the Whitney Museum, February 9-March 5, 1937.
[2] The Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

Other label copy, Erin Pinon, June 2016:
Guy Pène du Bois began his career as an illustrator and critic, celebrating modernism in both writing and practice. As student of William Merritt Chase, Kenneth Hayes Miller and Robert Henri, he remained active in the New York art scene throughout the early 20th century, during which he would become a celebrated satirist. 
 
A true observationalist, du Bois painted scenes and people from his daily life, choosing the events and goings-on of New York’s elite as his primary subject. His keen examination and study of the social elite were pointed and ironic, and can often be read as a contemporary social commentary. du Bois’ painting adhered to the Ashcan School’s style of loose, gestural brushstrokes as see here in Costume Dance. The scene painted here is emblematic du Bois’ subject treatment. Three figures dressed in ornamental performance costumes and powdered with makeup intimately gather center stage. A seated performer fixes their gaze on the audience, deepening the eerie despondence of this melancholic theatre scene.  

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

IMAGE ASSETS

WEB RESOURCES 
  • Guy Pène Du Bois: The Twenties at Home and Abroad~Betsy's Fahlman's essay for a 1994 exhibition at the Westmoreland Museum of Art (Greenburg, PA) summarizes Du Bois' career and offers additional insight on his depictions of couples.
  • Guy Pène Du Bois: The 1920s~Check out Richard Armstrong's essay in the Whitney Museum of American Art's exhibition catalogue available through the Internet Archive.
  • Life (June 20, 1949)~Look through this 1949 Life magazine feature on Guy Pène Du Bois.

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS

TEACHING IDEAS

RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 1963.171

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General Description
 
Born in New York in 1884, Guy Pène Du Bois was of aristocratic ancestry. He studied painting with Robert Henri, but it was as a student in Paris that he achieved the style he used so effectively as a weapon with which to puncture complacency of mediocre people, the vulgar, rich, and foolish. Du Bois, along with John Sloan, George Bellows, and Edward Hopper, is often considered an upholder of a renovated and simplified realism in American art. Chester Dale, the donor of this and another Du Bois painting in the Dallas Museum of Art collection, was a key supporter of the artist's career.

Adapted from
DMA Acquisition proposal (Chester Dale Gifts), 1963.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 
  • Guy Pène Du Bois: The Twenties at Home and Abroad~Betsy's Fahlman's essay for a 1994 exhibition at the Westmoreland Museum of Art (Greenburg, PA) summarizes Du Bois' career and offers additional insight on his depictions of couples.
  • Guy Pène Du Bois: The 1920s~Check out Richard Armstrong's essay in the Whitney Museum of American Art's exhibition catalogue available through the Internet Archive.
  • Life (June 20, 1949)~Look through this 1949 Life magazine feature on Guy Pène Du Bois.

Notes
Added geographies to the artist record- see 1945.11

Add exhibition:
"New York Realists," Whitney Museum of American Art, February 9-March 5, 1937

Added probable acquisition proposal to TMS record as text entry (because I do not have editing privileges to the Registration module).

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers
Guy Pène Du Bois

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials
oil
panel

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms
performers
figures
realism
theater
costumes
sitting
standing
backstage
clown

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
By 1937- d.1962: Chester Dale (d.1962), New York, NY [1] 
1962-1963: Chester Dale Estate
1963: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, bequest from the above [2]

[1] This owner appears on the documentation from "New York Realists" exhibition at the Whitney Museum, February 9-March 5, 1937.
[2] The Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

Other label copy, Erin Pinon, June 2016:
Guy Pène du Bois began his career as an illustrator and critic, celebrating modernism in both writing and practice. As student of William Merritt Chase, Kenneth Hayes Miller and Robert Henri, he remained active in the New York art scene throughout the early 20th century, during which he would become a celebrated satirist. 
 
A true observationalist, du Bois painted scenes and people from his daily life, choosing the events and goings-on of New York’s elite as his primary subject. His keen examination and study of the social elite were pointed and ironic, and can often be read as a contemporary social commentary. du Bois’ painting adhered to the Ashcan School’s style of loose, gestural brushstrokes as see here in Costume Dance. The scene painted here is emblematic du Bois’ subject treatment. Three figures dressed in ornamental performance costumes and powdered with makeup intimately gather center stage. A seated performer fixes their gaze on the audience, deepening the eerie despondence of this melancholic theatre scene.  

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
1963.171
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
figures (representations): AAT: 300189808
standing: AAT: 300239500
%Archived
sitting (seated): AAT: 300263970
oil paint: AAT: 300015050
@Schiller
*American Art
Paris (France): TGN: 7008038
New York (New York/United States): TGN: 7007567
realism (artistic concept): AAT: 300056550
Henri_Robert: ULAN: 500005486
costume (character dress): AAT: 300266810
panels (surface components): AAT: 300069079
backstages: AAT: 300252175
performances (entertainment events): AAT: 300069200
theater (discipline): AAT: 300054148
clowns (performers): AAT: 300025660
Académie Colarossi: ULAN: 500310036
Du Bois_Guy Pène: ULAN: 500120494
Pierrot (character / clown): DMA
source file
object_notes_2_d-0188.xml.nores