Original view of Nicolas de Staël's atelier with his palette and three paintings
Paris n.d. (circa 1954), photo:17,3x12,2cm ; leaf: 24x18,2cm.
Original silver print photograph of Nicolas de Staël's atelier by Denise Colomb.
Small trace of rust on the upper right corner.
Charming view of the painter's atelier, 7 rue Gauguet in Paris, taken one year before his death. Featuring his palette as well as two paintings from his Flowers series (1952-1953), and an abstract composition on the right.
Taken by Denise Colomb, great portraitist of the 20th century known for her portraits of Antonin Artaud, Giacometti, Picasso, Soulages and Miro in their studios.
“It is said that his workshop was the cave of a palaeontological potter. With sediment, layers of paleo... A crucible, a large material well, riddled with pigments, paintbrushes, pots of plastered trowels, buckets, rags. In a strong smell of turpentine. A workshop covered, soiled, stained with dirt, with masonry clay. Its wingspan, its strength, its topsail height springs into this crater of Vesuvius. Slightly disoriented, he leans, he pours. To paint, for him, is to be prey to vertigo, to unpredictable bifurcations of accident, of chance. (Patrick Grainville, Les Yeux de Milos)