Showing posts with label Matisse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matisse. Show all posts

8.02.2017

MULTIPLE MATISSE MASTERPIECES

Henri Matisse, along with his rival Pablo Picasso, revolutionized painting in the early 20th century. Like Pierre Bonnard in my last blog post, Matisse began his career in Paris, but in 1904, he visited the south of France and fell in love with bright light and colors of the area.  For several years he painted in the style known as fauvism where the painters expressed emotion with bold brushstrokes and colors.

Fauvism only lasted for a few years, but Matisse's career and fame continued to grow. He traveled to Algiers, Spain and Tangiers throughout the years and tended to alter his painting style based on what he saw in each place. He was also the victim of much criticism (one of his paintings was actually burned in effigy in Chicago in 1913). 

It was the Paris-based American collectors Leo and Gertrude Stein and the notable Russian art collector Sergei Shchukin who initially began the early support for Matisse. 

Still Life (1905): 
A perfect example of Matisse's Fauvism work, with its heavy brushstrokes and brilliant color. 

Pot of Geraniums (1912): 
Into the 1910s, Matisse continued to create works using bright colors, limited detailing and strong outlines.
























Odalisque, Half-Length: The Tattoo (1923): 
In the 1920s, he reverted to more conventional "model" painting, depicting figures in exotic costumes in the textile-sheathed interior of his Nice studio.  












































Still Life with Apples on a Pink Tablecloth (1924):
Matisse spent most of the 1920s living in the Nice; he incorporated many of the ideas he gathered during his past trips to Morocco such as these clashing patterns and bold color.
Still Life with Pineapple (1924):
Woman Seated in an Armchair (1940):
This painting was confiscated by the Nazis in 1941 by the Jewish French art dealer, Paul Rosenberg. It was returned to the Rosenberg family in  1948 and sold to the writer Somerset Maugham.


In the next post I will begin to show the masterpieces from the exhibition Frédéric Bazille and the Birth of Impressionism. That exhibition was the main reason for our trip to Washington DC.

The National Gallery of Art is located on the National Mall between 3rd and 9th Streets NW along Constitution Avenue. The entrance to the East Building on 4th Street NW.
  • Admission is always FREE.
  • Open Monday-Saturday: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
  • Open Sunday: 11 a.m. - 6 p.m.
  • Closed on December 25 and January 1. 
All photos in this blog post were taken by me during my visit in June, 2017.  Unauthorized use is prohibited.

7.16.2017

PIERRE BONNARD IN THE EAST BUILDING

Continuing on with my tour of the National Gallery of Art's East building, I exited the room with the Modigliani paintings and entered a room filled with paintings by two of my favorite painters: Pierre Bonnard and Henri Matisse.

Both artists began their careers in Paris but later they were drawn to the light and color of southern France. I love color in paintings; that's why I love the paintings of the Fauvists  and Nabis; Matisse was associated with the Fauvists; Bonnard was associated with the Nabis. These two artists' work really show how color was important to them in their works. See for yourselves...

Many of Bonnard's paintings simply focus on the everyday life around him.

Work Table (1926/1937)
This painting was confiscated by the Nazi ERR during WWII, and selected by Herman Goering during one of his *tours* of the Jeu de Paume. It was recovered after the war and returned to France.











































The Green Table (1910)

































Nude in an Interior (1935): 
The detailing in this painting is remarkable: in the patterns in the wallpaper, the carpeting and the sofa.












































Stairs in the Artist's Garden (1942/1944): 
This painting shows the brilliant color Bonnard found while living in the South of France.

































A Spring Landscape (1935)


In the next post I will show the brilliant colors of Matisse's masterpieces.

The National Gallery of Art is located on the National Mall between 3rd and 9th Streets NW along Constitution Avenue. The entrance to the East Building is on 4th Street NW.
  • Admission is always FREE.
  • Open Monday-Saturday: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
  • Open Sunday: 11 a.m. - 6 p.m.
  • Closed on December 25 and January 1. 
All photos in this blog post were taken by me during my visit in June, 2017.  Unauthorized use is prohibited.

11.11.2012

MORE MUSEUM MASTERPIECES

To finish up my visit to the Toledo Art Museum, here are a few more masterpieces in their permanent collection.

Paul Guillaume (1915) by Amedeo Modigliani









































Paul Guillaume was a Parisian art dealer who became one of Modigliani's earliest supporters.  Along with paintings by Modigliani, Guillaume also dealt with works by Matisse and Picasso.  After his death and the death of his wife, Guillaume's personal collection became part of the permanent collection of the Musée de l'Orangerie in Paris.

Speaking of Picasso...

Woman in a Black Hat (1909) by Pablo Picasso
 








































This early Cubist painting shows Fernande Olivier, one of Picasso's many mistresses.  This type of Cubism was called analytical cubism where the palette was severely limited, largely black, browns, grays and off-whites and the figures rigidly geometric.

Street in Tahiti (1891) by Paul Gauguin









































Paul Gauguin, dissatisfied with life in Europe, traveled to Tahiti for the first of many times in 1891.  His renewed enthusiasm shows in the brilliant colors he used in the paintings.

Regatta at Trouville (1884) by Gustave Caillebotte




















Not as well known as his Impressionist friends, Gustave Caillebotte came from a wealthy family.  An engineer by profession, he also studied at the Fine Arts School of Paris where he met Degas, Monet and Renoir in 1874 and helped them organize their first group exhibition in Paris this same year.  He also helped them financially by purchasing some of their paintings.

Speaking of Degas...

Victoria Dubourg (1866-1868) by Edgar Degas









































A painter herself, Victoria Dubourg was married to French painter Henri Fantin-Latour. Degas went to great lengths to perfect this painting...on the wall behind Victoria you can see the slight images of two framed paintings that Degas removed by changing the wall surface.

Landscape (1906) by André Derain

André Derain also studied engineering but after meeting Henri Matisse and George Rouault he began to pursue an artistic career. A 1901 Vincent van Gogh exhibition influenced the style of Derain and his peers, and they began their use of bold colors and abstract form.  After a 1905 exhibition a critic called them fauves or wild beasts, thus beginning the Fauvism movement.

I thoroughly enjoyed my visit to the fabulous Toledo Art Museum.  I hope you have enjoyed my blog posts showing my favorite masterpieces in the museum.


For more information visit: http://www.toledomuseum.org/.

Toledo Art Museum
2445 Monroe Street
Toledo, OH   43620
Phone: 419.255.6000

For directions: click here.
  • Admission is FREE every day for all visitors.
  • There may be a charge for special exhibitions.
  • Closed Mondays.
  • Closed January 1, July 4, Thanksgiving, Christmas Day.
  • Open 10:00-4:00 on Tuesday-Thursday.
  • Open 10:00-10:00 on Friday.
  • Open 10:00-6:00 on Saturday.
  • Open 12:00-6:00 on Sunday.
NOTE: All photos of the paintings in this blog post were taken by me on my visit to the Toledo Art Museum in May, 2012.

2.09.2012

ART IN MY TOWN

I've written several posts about the world-class museums I've been fortunate to visit in my travels in Europe, but you know what?  I've got a world-class art museum right in my own backyard!  The Art Institute of Chicago.

The Art Institute of Chicago has one of the most renowned collections of paintings in the world.  But it's not just the collection inside the building that is famous.  The building that houses the collection is just as famous.  The exterior of the Art Institute is one of the most photographed buildings in Chicago, and the two huge lions that greet visitors at the entrance attract as much attention today as they did more than a century ago. 

They get decorated with wreaths every Christmas...























And they get into the spirit of special sports occasions such as when the Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup Championship in 2010.























But of course, it's the art collection everyone comes to see when they visit the museum.  Some of my most favorite paintings are part of its permanent collection:

Young Girl with Hat (1892) by Berthe Morisot



This is my absolute favorite painting in any museum, and Berthe Morisot is my favorite painter.  She was a rare female French Impressionist, painting at the same time as her colleagues Monet, Degas, Sisley, Renoir and Édouard Manet with whom she was romantically involved.  However, she married Eugene Manet, Édouard's brother.  Other excellent works by her are:

The Garden (1882) by Berthe Morisot






































Woman at her Toilette (1875) by Berthe Morisot
























One of the last visits I made to the museum I discovered this masterpiece which I had not seen on display previously:

Auvers, Panoramic View (1873/1875) by Paul Cézanne




Édouard Vuillard is one of my favorite painters.  The Art Institute has several wonderful examples of his work:

Annette Roussel with a Broken Chair (1900) by Édouard Vuillard



Vuillard's Room at the Château des Clayes (1932) by Édouard Vuillard

Madame Arthur Fontaine in a Pink Shawl (1904) by Édouard Vuillard

Woman seated on a Sofa (1906) by Édouard Vuillard





Vuillard was a member of a post-Impressionist group called The Nabis, a group of painters whose works I enjoy.  Nabi means prophet in Hebrew and in Arabic. The rebellious group of young student artists came together in the fall of 1888, and like many of the Impressionists and post-Impressionists, they were inspired by the broad planes of unmediated color, thick outlines, and bold patterns. Another fantastic example is:

The White Tablecloth (1926) by Pierre Bonnard



Another group of Post-Impressionist painters I like are the Fauvists (fauve means wild beast in French) also because of their use of bright, intense colors.  Excellent examples (such vivid colors!) in the Art Institute collection include:
   
Antwerp (1906) by Georges Braque


Landscape at L'Estaque (1906) by Georges Braque


Another one of my favorite paintings is by the Dutch painter, Piet Mondrian.  There is just something about the symmetry with the simple horizontal and vertical lines and colors and reflection in this painting that I find mesmerizing.

Farm near Duivendrecht (1916) by Piet Mondrain


Continuing on the Dutch theme and remembering my recent trip to the Netherlands, on my most recent visit to the Art Institute, I sought out any Dutch Masters paintings in the collection.  Jan Steen was one of the original 17th century Dutch Golden Age painters. He was known for painting scenes of daily life.  Many of the scenes he portrayed are lively to the point of chaos, so much so that a Jan Steen household, meaning a messy scene, became a Dutch proverb.

The Family Concert (1666) by Jan Steen



You can't speak about Dutch painters without mentioning Rembrandt. Throughout his career, Rembrandt painted powerful studies of single figures, conveying character through dramatic costume and lighting.

Old Man with a Gold Chain (1631) by Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn


The museum has dozens of wonderful etchings by Rembrandt.  This print exemplifies the popular depiction of the Passion of Christ which often combined multiple part of the New Testament story into one overwhelming scene:

Christ Before Pilate: Large Plate (1636) by Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn


Jan Uytenbogaert, “The Goldweigher” (1639) by Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn

Other painters discovered on my recent Netherlands/Belgium trip were the Flemish masters, one painter being Hans Memling.  Imagine my delight in finding this diptych in the Art Institute collection.  Separated for many years, the two images were reunited in 1953.  Fortunately, the image on the left is still in wonderful condition, even after 525 years!  Unfortunately, the original matching image on the right side is in poor condition.  The image shown here on the right side is actually the back side of the original painting, Portrait of a Man in Prayer.

Virgin and Child (1485) by Hans Memling
St. Anthony of Padua (1485) by Hans Memling




Photo of the original diptych showing Portrait of a Man in Prayer.






And of course, there are the German Expressionist paintings, my love of which I wrote about in my last post.  There are some excellent German Expressionist paintings in the Art Institute's permanent collection.

Despite being raised in a country that discouraged women from careers in art, Gabriele Münter became a founding member of one of the most influential early 20th-century modernist movements: German expressionism.  In 1911 Gabriele Münter, along with Franz Marc and her lover, Wassily Kandinsky, founded the Der Blaue Reiter group, an important expressionist organization.

Still Life with Queen (1912) by Gabriele Münter



The Bewitched Mill (1913) by Franz Marc


Red-Haired Girl (1919) by Emil Nolde

Speaking of color:  You can't forget this artist:

Interior at Nice (1919 or 1920) by Henri Matisse

Women before an Aquarium (1921-1923) by Henri Matisse
 

These are just a few of my favorite paintings located in the Art Institute of Chicago.  All photos in this post were taken by me at various visits to the museum.
 
In my next post I'll continue showing many more of my favorite paintings from several different genres.
  • Admission for adults is $18.00**
  • Admission for Students and Seniors is $12.00
  • The museum is closed Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s days.
  • Open Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 10:30-5:00.
  • Open Thursday 10:30-8:00.
  • Open Friday, Saturday, Sunday 10:30-5:00.
  • Free Family Wednesdays: Admission to the Art Institute of Chicago is free to Illinois residents the first and second Wednesday of every month.
** Chicago residents receive a $2 discount on admission in recognition of the significant support given to the museum through local property taxes. A valid photo ID with a resident address is required.

For more information, visit: http://www.artic.edu

12.08.2010

IF YOU LOVE MONET, DON'T MISS THIS MUSEUM: PART DEUX

Continuing on the same theme from the last post, the other must-see Paris museum for those mad for Monet is the Musée de l'Orangerie.

As its name suggests, the Musée de l'Orangerie is housed in a former orangery, built in 1852 to house the orange trees of the Tuileries Gardens. Used by the Third Republic as a depository for materials or a place of accommodation for soldiers, in 1921 it became, like the Jeu de Paume, its neighbor on the other side of the Jardin des Tuileries, an annex of the museum of Luxembourg, the predecessor of the National Museum of Modern Art. In 1918, Claude Monet chose to donate his great Nymphéas panels to France. He worked on these 6-foot-tall and over 50-foot-long panels for nearly eight years. The museum opened to the public on May 17, 1927, six months after Monet's death.

How fortunate for me that the week before I visited Paris in May, 2006, this museum finally reopened after a long 6-year, $36 million renovation. The most important change was the demolition of the entire second floor so that the Nymphéas could be seen in the natural light that Monet envisioned in the two specially-designed oval rooms.

Le Bassin aux Nymphéas, Soleil Couchant

Le Bassin aux Nymphéas, Reflets Vert



Le Bassin aux Nymphéas sans Saules, Matin
Le Bassin aux Nymphéas avec Saules, Le Matin Clair
The paintings are just incredible to see. These photos show just four of the eight panels Monet painted. The two separate oval-shaped rooms hold four panels each. Take a few moments, sit down on the benches in the middle of each room and just admire the incredible beauty of these paintings!

But attention art lovers!

There is so much more to see than just Monet's Nymphéas panels.

During the recent renovation the lower level was also opened up to emit more natural light. It is here that the Jean Walter and Paul Guillaume Collection is now on display; prior to the renovation, these paintings occupied the now-demolished second level.

Along the masterpiece works to see:

Le Déjeuner sur l'Herbe by Paul Cézanne
Yvonne et Christine LeRolle Jouant le Piano by Pierre Auguste Renoir

Bouquet de Tulipes by Pierre Auguste Renoir




























Argenteuil by Claude Monet
La Femme avec un Tamborine by Picasso
Femme au Ruban de Velours by Modigliani


















Before this trip to Paris, I was really only familiar with the French Impressionists and Vincent van Gogh, having seen their works during my many trip to the Art Institute of Chicago. The trip to Paris opened my eyes and knowledge to so many other painters and their works that I was unaware of until then.

A visit to a museum can introduce you to artists that you were unfamiliar with, and you then begin to admire their work when you see their paintings in other museums. At the Musée de l'Orangerie, I "discovered" Amadeo Modigliani, Chaim Soutine and André Derain. I believe this was the beginning of my expanded appreciation of the myriad genres of art.  I now enjoy the Dutch Masters and Flemish Primitives as much as I do the French Impressionists.

BASIC INFORMATION:
  • Musée de l'Orangerie is closed on Tuesdays, May 1 and December 25.
  • Open Tuesday through Sunday from 09:00 - 18:00.
  • You should use your Paris Museum Pass at this museum.
  • The current entrance fee is €7.50.
  • Free entrance 1st Sunday of each month.
  • Photography is allowed (no flash).