Including works from Gaby and Ami Brown Collection,
Sara and Ephraim Kishon Collection,
Estate of Ruth Schloss,
The Art Collection of the Poet Nathan Zach.
LOT 69:
Reuven Rubin
|
1893 - 1974
Boy with Flowers Riding a Donkey,
Oil on canvas, 158x97 cm.
Signed.
The authenticity of the painting has been confirmed by Ms. Carmela Rubin, Rubin Museum, Tel-Aviv.
This painting, one of the largest of Reuven's paintings, was likely painted around 1940, even before the painter began to surround his painted figures with black outlines. Now, the painter and his wife are in New York, far from the disaster of the World War, a peaceful and very fruitful period in Reuven's work, he experienced success in his exhibitions throughout the USA, in which the orient of the Land of Israel is reflected as a place that is all good. These are the days when Reuven returned to one of the early paintings he painted in Israel - between 1925-1926 - "Arab rider with a bouquet of flowers." Then, the artist represented an Arab father and son on a donkey against the background of the sea and dunes and near a pink Arab house in the heart of an orchard.
The father in the front, his son in the back, both handsome and in festive attire (the father in black shorts and a white shirt, wearing flip flops; the son in a light blue flowered Galabia (traditional attire). The father is holding a huge bouquet of spring flowers, while his gray donkey tilts his head back and bites the leaves that the father hands him, confirming the circular unity of the native and the local animal. The painting, one of Reuven's most well-known and beloved paintings, was understood as a greeting of peace and friendship from the native Arabs to the Jewish immigrants arriving in Israel, a painting typical of the idealization of the Arab in Israeli painting in the 1920s, an era that, as we know, came to an end in 1920 and after. And here, now, about 20 years later, Reuven returned to the exact same motif, as someone who craves the innocence and the oriental harmony at that time. With double the size of its predecessor painting (which height was 81cm) he returns to that picture, yet with some changes to its composition: Now, the son is riding in front, holding the giant bouquet of flowers, while his father is behind. The father and the son in light blue robes, both barefoot, with the father in a light blue Tarbush (traditional headwear) while playing the flute (it should be compared to the "Mholell" - a painting by Reuven from 1938 from the MOMA collection). Between the Arab and his donkey, which sends its head forward, there is no longer a circle of unity. But, most of all, Reuven removes from his new painting any sign of a local background: no more sea of Tel Aviv with sailboats, no more an Arab orchard in Jaffa: the background is completely neutral and focuses the gaze on the idyllic charm of the spring bouquet of flowers and the melody of the flute.
Without a local identity, the beloved and multi-sensory orientalist celebration intensifies, as it has been dominated since the 19th century by Western creators and viewers. Reuven's choice of the large format indicates the importance he attributed to this painting and his confidence in the strong impression it would leave on the New York public.
Gideon Ofrat
Measurement with frame: | 106 x 168 cm |