La Mariée

La Mariée
English language: The Bride
Artist Marc Chagall
Year 1950 (1950)
Medium Gouache, pastel
Dimensions 68 cm × 53 cm (27 in × 21 in)
Owner Private collection, Japan

La Mariée (French for "The Bride") is a painting in oil on canvas, 68×53 cm, created in 1950 by Russian-French artist Marc Chagall. It is held in a private collection in Japan.

The painting

Chagall paintings often feature young women or couples, but in La Mariée the focus is on a singular young woman in quasi-wedding attire with a bouquet of flowers. Described by a Chagall fans as "an ode to young love", the woman is presented to the viewer in a bold and conspicuous fashion, as if the viewer is the one marrying her.[1]

Colours

The second peculiarity of La Mariée compared to the majority of other Chagall paintings is the choice of colors. The young woman is dressed in a red dress lively, with a virginal white veil draped over her head, while the background is mostly a mix of fresh and soft blue and gray. This effect allows the image of the woman to jump off the canvas and attract the viewer's attention. It is evident that Chagall has attempted to highlight the woman, as is tradition in every marriage.[1]

Images in La Mariée

The wedding is the major theme of the painting, and includes a feature found in other Chagall paintings and in many other European artworks of the twentieth century, animals playing musical instruments. In this case it's a goat playing a violin. The painting also shows a man hanging over the head of the bride with his hands on her veil, a church which stands in the background almost as an afterthought,[1] a man playing a flute, a girl with pigtails, a fish with arms holding a candle and a chair, several more buildings, and a squirrel.

Notting Hill

Main article: Notting Hill (film)

In the 1999 film Notting Hill, Julia Roberts' character Anna Scott sees a poster of La Mariée in the home of Hugh Grant's character, William Thacker. Anna later gives William what is presumably the original.

According to director Roger Michell in an article in Entertainment Weekly, the painting was chosen because screenwriter Richard Curtis was a fan of Chagall's work, and because La Mariée "depicts a yearning for something that's lost." Producers had a reproduction made for use in the film, but had to first get permission from the painting's owners and obtain clearance from the British Design and Artists Copyright Society. Finally, according to producer Duncan Kenworthy, "... we had to agree to destroy it. They were concerned that if our fake was too good, it might float around the market and create problems." The article notes that the canvas used in the film could have been "worth between $500,000 and $1 million." [2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "La Mariée, Marc Chagall". ChagallPaintings.org. Retrieved 2012-12-29.
  2. Flashes ~ Entertainment Weekly, issue #489 June 11, 1999
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