"Day", fragment

Ferdinand Hodler Swiss, 1853-1918
Not On View
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About the Artwork

Between 1892 and 1899, Ferdinand Hodler explored ideas in drawings, sketches, and paintings for a large-scale mural composition titled Day. In that monumental work –– which Hodler realized in four versions –– a group of five nude female figures in an expansive but spare, light-infused landscape create an image of the renewal of life at the break of each day. This painting is a fragment of the first version of Day (now partially destroyed), which Hodler completed in 1899 and then followed with three variants. The woman turns to her left to shield her eyes from the light in a classical gesture of awakening from sleep. An examination of the canvas revealed that it was cut on three sides. After Hodler separated this painting from other parts of the composition, he modified it to be able to sell it as an independent work: he painted over body parts of the neighboring figures, which are still partly visible on the right and the left of the image.

"Day", fragment

1899

Ferdinand Hodler

1853-1918

Swiss

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Oil on canvas

Unframed: 41 7/8 × 39 3/8 inches (106.4 × 100 cm) Framed: 49 3/8 × 46 13/16 × 1 1/2 inches (125.4 × 118.9 × 3.8 cm)

Paintings

European Modern Art to 1970

Founders Society Purchase, Robert H. Tannahill Foundation Fund

1988.65

Copyright Not Evaluated

Markings

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Provenance

1921, (Gallery Neupert, Zürich, Switzerland);
(Gallery Thannhauser, Munich, Germany);
1988, (Bruno Meissner, Zürich, Switzerland);
1988-present, purchase by the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)

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Exhibition History

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The exhibition history of a number of objects in our collection only begins after their acquisition by the museum, and may reflect an incomplete record.

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Published References

Hodler Gedächtnis-Ausstellung, Bern, 1921. Exh. cat., Kunstmuseum Bern. p. 28, no. 305. [lent by Gallery Neupert, Zürich.]

Müller, W.Y. Die Kunst Ferdinand Hodlers Reife und Spätwerk 1895-1918. vol. 2. Zürich, 1941, p. 480, no. 51. [as ca. 1900.]

Bulletin of the DIA 65, no. 2/3 (1989): p. 12 (fig. 8).

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Catalogue Raisoneé

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Credit Line for Reproduction

Ferdinand Hodler, "Day", fragment, 1899, oil on canvas. Detroit Institute of Arts, Founders Society Purchase, Robert H. Tannahill Foundation Fund, 1988.65.

"Day", fragment
"Day", fragment