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Henri Manguin — Les Pins Autour de la Servianne
Henri Manguin — Les Pins Autour de la Servianne
Henri Manguin

Les Pins Autour de la Servianne

Les Pins Autour de la Servianne invites the eye into a sun-drenched landscape of pines rendered in sumptuous pinks, purples, and saturated greens, a palette that soothes as much as it stimulates. Executed in oil on canvas in July and August of 1919, the work marks a significant moment of return for Henri Manguin, who had spent five years away from the South of France before settling with his family near Marseille at an old convent called La Servianne. The property clearly stirred his ambitions; he described it as a place where he intended to make important canvases, and the present work bears out that conviction in every confident brushstroke. Compared to Manguin's earlier paintings from Saint-Tropez, this composition reveals a freer, more harmonious touch, one in which forms blend and breathe rather than assert hard boundaries. The handling places him in distinguished company. Like Cézanne, Signac, and Henri-Edmond Cross before him, Manguin understood that the Midi was not merely a geographical setting but a kind of mythological space, where heat, light, and color conspire to suspend ordinary time. His contribution was to inflect that tradition with a distinctly Fauvist sensibility, transforming an age-old Arcadian subject into something modern and emotionally immediate. Fellow painter Félix Vallotton, standing before a Manguin canvas in 1909, captured the effect simply and precisely: "It makes me feel warm inside." At 33 by 40.6 centimetres, the work is intimate in scale yet generous in feeling, suited to a private context where its quiet radiance can be experienced at close range. The canvas is laid down to board and bears the artist's signature, offering collectors a well-preserved and readily displayable example of Manguin at a moment of personal and artistic renewal.

Medium
Oil on canvas laid down to board
Overall
Signed
Yes

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Henri Manguin, Les Pins Autour de la Servianne

Les Pins Autour de la Servianne invites the eye into a sun-drenched landscape of pines rendered in sumptuous pinks, purples, and saturated greens, a palette that soothes as much as it stimulates. Executed in oil on canvas in July and August of 1919, the work marks a significant moment of return for Henri Manguin, who had spent five years away from the South of France before settling with his family near Marseille at an old convent called La Servianne. The property clearly stirred his ambitions; he described it as a place where he intended to make important canvases, and the present work bears out that conviction in every confident brushstroke. Compared to Manguin's earlier paintings from Saint-Tropez, this composition reveals a freer, more harmonious touch, one in which forms blend and breathe rather than assert hard boundaries. The handling places him in distinguished company. Like Cézanne, Signac, and Henri-Edmond Cross before him, Manguin understood that the Midi was not merely a geographical setting but a kind of mythological space, where heat, light, and color conspire to suspend ordinary time. His contribution was to inflect that tradition with a distinctly Fauvist sensibility, transforming an age-old Arcadian subject into something modern and emotionally immediate. Fellow painter Félix Vallotton, standing before a Manguin canvas in 1909, captured the effect simply and precisely: "It makes me feel warm inside." At 33 by 40.6 centimetres, the work is intimate in scale yet generous in feeling, suited to a private context where its quiet radiance can be experienced at close range. The canvas is laid down to board and bears the artist's signature, offering collectors a well-preserved and readily displayable example of Manguin at a moment of personal and artistic renewal.

Medium
Oil on canvas laid down to board
Dimensions
overall: 33 x 40.6 cm
Signed
Hand-signed by the artist
Seen at
Freeman's | Hindman

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Collected by

Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris