and the Fauves - Wienand Verlag
Transcription
and the Fauves - Wienand Verlag
Contents MATISSE and the Fauves Edited by Heinz Widauer and Claudine Grammont With contributions by Cécile Debray, Jack Flam, Claudine Grammont Anita Hopmans, John Klein, Rémi Labrusse Fabienne Queyroux & Nathalie Muller and Heinz Widauer Wienand 8 Klaus Albrecht Schröder Foreword and Acknowledgements 10 Heinz Widauer, Claudine Grammont Acknowledgements 14 Heinz Widauer Henri Matisse and the Fauves: An Introduction Catalogue 28 ‘Matisse Paints like a Crazy Impressionist’ 36 The Students of Gustave Moreau 48 From Neo-Impressionism to Fauvism 58 Collioure: Henri Matisse and André Derain 82 The Chatou Group 98 The London Paintings by André Derain 110 The Le Havre Group 140 Into the Myth: From Classicism to Primitivism ‘What I Am After, above all, Is Expression’ 176 206 Kees van Dongen 224 Georges Rouault 234 Essays 250 Rémi Labrusse ‘Fauvism’. A Word and a Thing 268 Jack Flam Explosiveness, Primitivism, Fragmentation, and the New Unity of Modern Painting 284 John Klein The Inner Circles of Fauve Portraiture 294 Cécile Debray Vlaminck: the Primitive of His Art 302 Anita Hopmans Fluctuating Fortunes: Kees van Dongen, a Dutch Fauve in the French Arena 314 Fabienne Queyroux & Nathalie Muller Fauve Prints in the Cabinet d’estampes modernes Claudine Grammont Fauvism in the Debate around Classicism 318 List of Exhibited Works 325 Selected Literature 2 Henri Matisse Still Life with Pottery and Fruit 1901 32 3 Henri Matisse Street in Arcueil 1903/4 33 From Neo-Impressionism to Fauvism taken by it and bought the painting for his dining room at La Hune, regardless of the doubts Matisse was meanwhile voicing: that the fragmented colour would destroy the drawing Watercolours, chalk sketches, and charcoal drawings lay The meticulous preparation of the composition with prelimi- and the forms, which, after all, received all their eloquence scattered around Henri Matisse’s studio in Paris while he was nary drawings and the fragmented brushwork would have from the contours, and that where the colours collided, the painting The Gulf of Saint-Tropez (cat. 13) in the autumn been entirely to Signac’s liking, Matisse might have thought surface of the picture would be disturbed by flickering. Ma- of 1904. A few weeks earlier he had been strolling along the when placing the finishing yellow touches onto the pale blue tisse went in search of remedies. town’s shore with his wife, Amélie, and young son Pierre. surface of the sea in The Gulf of Saint-Tropez. Here the sun- The subsequent summer, he and his family again travelled On this occasion, he had sketched them as well as the sur- light dimly reflects on the water. Matisse has applied short south: this time not to the mecca of neo-Impressionism, but roundings using Conté crayons and watercolour. Matisse strokes next to and partly on top of each other, bathing the to Collioure, a remote fishing village in the eastern foothills and his family had spent the whole summer with Paul Sig- path along the rocky coast in vermilion. The day’s last rays of the Pyrenees. They arrived in May, and in the weeks to nac in Saint-Tropez, who had invited Matisse to his mansion, of the sun are about to dissipate, with the reddish glow of come, Matisse familiarised himself with the surroundings and La Hune. Signac had settled in southern France upon the the approaching dusk gaining ground; the mountains and recommendation of Henri Edmond Cross, one of the most their vegetation in the far distance are rendered in blues and duced drawings and watercolours, but hardly any paintings, prominent exponents of neo-Impressionism, who lived in greens. Matisse has used pure colours only to depict the sun- except for two oil sketches. One of them, a view of the port the nearby commune of Le Lavandou. set’s effect on the coastal strip. of Abaill (or Avall as it is called in this Catalonian part of Paul Signac’s villa ‘La Hune’, Saint-Tropez their motifs, the light conditions, and the colours. He pro- In 1898, Signac had published a manifesto entitled D’Eugène This painting can be seen as a response to a controver- France), he painted from the window of his studio, relying Delacroix au néo-impressionnisme in the periodical La Revue sy Matisse had had with Signac in the summer: Matisse had on the palette of the Divisionists (cat. 15). What at first sight blanche, dedicating it to Georges Seurat, his friend and the ‘in- shown him a painting – The Terrace, Saint-Tropez – he had appears to be a systematic arrangement of colour samples or ventor’ of neo-Impressionism, who had died prematurely. The painted at La Hune. Signac, probably disappointed that it was paint squeezed directly from the tube are annotations of pure programmatic text defined the fundamental principles of neo- not a picture in the neo-Impressionist style, had criticised it: colour that, when looked at more closely, turn out to be a port Impressionism, which Seurat had also referred to as Divisionism. the brushstrokes were too long, the dabs of colour too large. scene, with a jetty animated by figures and the masts of sailing It advised artists to paint with pure colours, placing them side Matisse was crestfallen; an anecdote has it that Amélie went boats. This coloured sketch was meant to be the prelude to a by side in the form of dots or short strokes so that they would for a walk with him along the shore so that he would calm further painting in the neo-Impressionist style, a panoramic blend in the viewer’s eye. According to the manifesto, which down. The studies and sketches Matisse had made on this view of the port of Abaill, which Matisse intended to present did not exclude Paul Cézanne, neo-Impressionism marked, at occasion of his family and the surroundings, including the at the Salon d’Automne in Paris in October 1905.3 least for the time being, the pinnacle within the canon of colour- trunk of a tall Scots pine, were now worked up in the canvas ism in painting, which began with Delacroix and ended with on the easel in front of him. For the purpose of orientation Signac. This concept enticed many artists to travel to southern and colour distribution, Matisse first drew the outlines and possible to prevent the irritating ‘vibrato’, as he called the France in order to gain first-hand experience with Signac. principal composition lines in charcoal: the bare, tall trunk flickering. These concerns guided Matisse in his work. Nev- Matisse, too, was enthusiastic about the neo-Impres- on the right and the coastal strip, extending from the Scots ertheless, a spontaneous and lively manner of painting was sionist approach at first and delighted at the opportunity to pine into the background where it meets a distant mountain still thwarted by the careful preparations, which involved peer over the shoulder of the doyen of neo-Impressionism. range on the horizon, divide up the picture plane. rendering a preliminary drawing and cartoon, as well as the 1 2 Matisse discovered that by placing the dots of colour furThe coastal road between Estérel and Agay ther apart and allowing the canvas to shine through, it was The previous year, Louis Valtat, a former student of Gus- The Gulf of Saint-Tropez is a key work: the figure of process of tracing. Work on the painting progressed but tave Moreau’s from Paris, had spent the summer in southern Amélie, the towering Scots pine, and the view across the bay slowly, and Matisse failed to complete it in time for the Salon France. It seems likely that Matisse knew Valtat’s painting The recur in Matisse’s painting Luxe, calme et volupté (Luxury, d’Automne. Moreover, in the meantime he had begun to fol- Red Rocks at Agay (cat. 14), a motif the artist had captured Calm and Pleasure; fig. p. 237). Matisse exhibited the latter low a different path. in the surroundings of Saint-Raphaël and one that had been composition, with which he painted himself into the Olym- By autumn 1905, the artist had arrived at a crossroads, popular since Impressionism because of its red colouring. The pus of the neo-Impressionists, at the Salon des Indépendants with immediacy, spontaneity, and surprise gaining the upper layout of the scene that Matisse was about to commit to can- in spring 1905. It is consistently and deliberately constructed; hand over Divisionism. At the Salon d’Automne, Matisse vas in the autumn of 1904 is comparable to the one painted by the contours of the figures are broken up into tiny coloured exhibited pictures in which he had employed the brush not Valtat of the two women in dark clothes resting in the rocky strokes, and even the faintly outlined mountains in the back- only as a means of painting, but also as a means of draw- red landscape in the lower left corner. ground are split up into small fragments. Signac was greatly 48 View of Collioure ing: in the painting La Japonaise: Woman beside the Water 49 54 André Derain The Pool of London 1906/7 104 105 74 Georges Braque Seascape, L’Estaque 1906 130 75 Henri Manguin Le Vallon, La Villa Demière 1905 131 101 André Derain Standing Female Nude, Arms Held Close to Her Body ca. 1906 162 102 André Derain Nudes (Eight Dancing and Crouching Figures) 1906 163 112 Henri Matisse The Idol 1906 174 113 Henri Matisse Two `Negresses´ 1907/8 175 123 Henri Matisse Seated Nude ca. 1906 188 124 Henri Matisse Reclining Female Nude 1906 189 152 Kees van Dongen The Gypsy (The Curious Girl) ca. 1910/11 222 153 Kees van Dongen Parisian Woman in Montmartre ca. 1910 223 Georges Rouault content. Rouault observed the condemned and humbled and those deprived by fate in their living environment; relentlessly he captured the misery at the fringes of society – the life Spaced out and bored, the owner of a shooting gallery has behind the counter, fearing the ball that might come flying of crooks, jugglers, and harlots. He critically witnessed court installed herself behind the counter (cat. 158), dismissively at him. trials and the self-complacent, unsympathetic way in which eyeing the funfair visitors that pass by. Now and then she When Rouault painted the picture, he could not have the judges and prosecutors treated the defendants. He, for also seems to squint over at a row of cardboard figures set up known that he had chosen a metaphor that would become a his part, avoided any accusation, but instead portrayed the behind her. They represent typical examples of the Parisian reality for him: people were shocked when he exhibited the prevailing order and distribution of power. In the oil paint- petite bourgeoisie and are dressed according to the everyday work at the Salon d’Automne in Paris in 1905. It was out of ing The Accused (cat. 159) of 1907, the faces of the judges and fashion of the period. Day after day they must literally stick the question to accept as art a sketchy depiction of human the defendant are also interchangeable; only the latter’s plain out their necks in order to secure the businesswoman’s living. sordidness rendered with mixed media in dark colours on pa- black clothes and white collar distinguish him from those Hence conspicuous headgear is part of their ‘working outfit’: per. Although no balls were thrown at Rouault and his paint- practicing the law. a top hat or bowler for the men, a turban or hat decorated ing, more modern methods were available to deride the artist In 1903, Rouault was appointed director of Moreau’s re- with pieces of fruit, plumes, or flowers for the women. At the and his work: on 4 November 1905, Camille Mauclair, editor- cently founded museum in his former studio in rue de la Ro- picture’s lower margin appears a box containing balls. It can in-chief of the conservative weekly magazine L’Illustration, chefoucauld. That year, he also began to devote himself to be assumed that if you hit the head or hat of a cardboard fig- exposed the composition, together with eleven other paint- the theme of the circus and funfair. The travelling circus was ure with a ball, it would tilt back, kicking up its legs. Hence ings, to the ridicule of his readership (fig. p. 19). a coveted childhood memory from the artist’s days in Bel- the shooting gallery was cleverly advertising the name of one Georges Rouault was a trained glass painter. In 1892 he leville, a quarter of Paris. Rouault deemed clowns and acro- of the queens of cancan dancing. The real Nini Patte-en-l’air, joined the class of Gustave Moreau at the École des Beaux- bats simulating a merry and colourful existence to be an ide- however, only displayed her feminine charms to a wealthy Arts in Paris, where Henri Matisse, Henri Manguin, and Al- ally suitable motif to express his scepticism towards the world: audience in one of the numerous Parisian cabarets. By con- bert Marquet were among his fellow students. Rouault was he offers the beholder a glimpse of the sphere behind the trast, the cardboard figures were meant to amuse the ordinary Moreau’s favourite pupil; like-minded intellectually and ar- scenes, where there is no room for glamour, magic, illusion, people. Here it was not the audience losing their heads at the tistically, they were united by a bond of friendship. Moreau’s or suggestion. The watercolour Head of a Clown (cat. 154) sight of a dancer’s beautiful legs, but the cardboard figures, death in 1898 precipitated Rouault into a serious depression. is a self-portrait: Rouault has depicted himself as someone thanks to the well-aimed throws of the ‘petit boulevard’. When Fernand Cormon succeeded Moreau as a teacher, who exposes his personality by displaying his profound inad- 2 equacy to an audience and expects nothing but mockery and Georges Rouault communicated in the form of parables. Rouault, like the future Fauves Matisse, Manguin, and Mar- He observed the human soul, its abysses, and also its forlorn- quet, left the École des Beaux-Arts. Whereas Matisse and the ness and loneliness. Rouault took to the brush not to accuse others changed over to Eugène Carrière, Rouault retired to In autumn 1903, Rouault was one of the co-founders of but to express empathy. Today, the message of his picture Jeu the Benedictine monastery Saint-Martin de Ligugé, where the Salon d’Automne. In 1905 he was involuntarily involved de massacre (La Noce à Nini Patte-en-l’air) is more topi- he joined the movement of the writer Joris-Karl Huysmans. in the art scandal arising in room VII: although his works cal than ever: the shooting gallery is a metaphor for life; its At the time, Huysmans was surrounding himself with artists were not exhibited immediately next to those by Matisse and puppets are ordinary people, marionettes in the hands of a and monks, intending to establish an art school with their the others, his former affiliation with ‘Moreau’s gang’ suf- profiteer who earns money by doing practically nothing. The assistance – the Maison Notre-Dame. Yet in 1902/03 the ficed to associate him with the Fauves. As a Fauve, Rouault business idea pursued here is the exploitation of human ag- French National Assembly decreed the dissolution of exist- held a marginal position: his paintings had not been installed gression, and the tactics employed are to set people against ing religious orders and the closure of educational institu- in room VII, but together with works by Paul Cézanne and one another. Yet the woman running the shooting gallery tions run by the church, so that nothing came of his dream the Nabis in room XVI. In the review published by Louis might just as well appear on the other side; given her facial of an artists’ colony. Rouault returned to Paris. The monastic Vauxcelles in the periodical Gil Blas, he was therefore not features and headdress, she could easily be exchanged for a seclusion had encouraged him not to make any concessions, mentioned in the same breath as the other ‘wild beasts’. Yet figure in the background. In any case, the scene evokes the neither to tradition nor to the spirit of the time. All he wished Rouault shared with his former colleagues a loose, occasion- mean, sadistic pleasure some individuals take in the ostracism to do was to pursue his own convictions, which were mostly ally gestural, and swift manner of painting. His almost re- and public humiliation of an alleged offender put in the pillo- religious. With this in mind, he ventured into a renewal of bellious approach to the pictorial tradition and his complete ry. The puppets’ faces are distorted to the point of caricature. religious history painting. Not parables from the Bible, but The beholder, as if in a mirror, sees himself not in front, but perceptions taken from real life were to convey religious 1 224 Georges Rouault, 1903 scorn in return if he wishes to do justice to his role. Georges Rouault (2nd from left) and Joris-Karl Huysmans (right) in the monastery of Saint-Martin de Ligugé, 1901 rejection of academic norms and conventions additionally contributed to his being regarded as one of their kind. 225