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Lost Cubist painting found on back of another canvas

Art experts in the Netherlands said Thursday they had discovered an important painting by the French Cubist Fernand Leger that had been hidden for more than a century on the back of another canvas.

FOUND AT LAST. This photograph taken in The Hague on October 4, 2022 shows Fernand Leger’s painting ‘Smoke over the Rooftops’ displayed at Studio Redivivus, a Hague-based art conservation and restoration specialist. Art experts in the Netherlands said they have discovered the masterpiece that was hidden on the back of another canvas for over a century. AFP

The unknown work “Smoke over the Rooftops,” believed to date from 1911-12, was on the flip-side of “Bastille Day,” made a year later, according to conservation specialists Studio Redivivus.

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Partially damaged and covered with a hard glue-like layer during its lost years, it has now been painstakingly restored and reveals a “turning point” in the work of Leger, a Paris contemporary of Picasso.

“It really is a discovery,” Gwendolyn Boeve-Jones, director of the Hague-based Studio Redivivus, told AFP.

The work is believed to be part of a series in which Leger painted the view from his studio of the Paris skyline towards Notre Dame, repeatedly focusing on the smoking chimneys.

Dutch art historian Sjraar van Heugten said only seven from the series were previously known to still exist, and the new work shows “hugely important” advances in Leger’s use of color and abstraction.

The story of the lost Leger begins around 110 years ago when the artist (1881-1955) gave the “Bastille Day” painting to his friend Marc Duchene as a wedding present in 1912 or 1913.

But Duchene was killed in World War I, and while the painting stayed in his family the “sad memories” meant it was never displayed and “remained unknown for years,” Van Heugten said.

“Bastille Day” was then bought from Duchene’s heirs in 1999 by the Triton Collection, a private art foundation that still owns the painting.

It found there had been some kind of restoration on the back, probably during the 1990s, but it was unknown exactly when and by whom – and in any case, it had merely caused further damage.

The mystery of what exactly was on the back remained largely intact, even as “Bastille Day” was shown in several galleries.

“It was covered to a large degree with a white-grey material and the collectors had been told it was nothing really to worry about, it’s not important,” said Boeve-Jones.

A backing board also obscured the image.

But the enigma continued to intrigue Boeve-Jones, who moved to the Netherlands from the United States to work at Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum before setting up her own studio.

“When I was doing a condition check… I saw some of this which was exposed, and I thought wow, that looks amazing,” said Boeve-Jones.

In 2016 the owners asked her to inspect further and Boeve-Jones, who says she has “known Leger my whole life,” turned detective by poring over the internet and through art publications.

The removal of the glue-like stuff then made it easier to see the distinctive forms and colours beneath, especially the billowing smoke.

“It wasn’t that difficult to see that it belonged in some way to the Fumees Sur Les Toits (Smoke over the Rooftops) series,” she said.

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