Showing posts with label Chaim Soutine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chaim Soutine. Show all posts

18/11/21

Chaïm Soutine / Willem de Kooning @ Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris - La peinture incarnée

Chaïm Soutine / Willem de Kooning, 
la peinture incarnée
Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris
Jusqu'au 10 janvier 2022

Le musée de l’Orangerie présente une exposition faisant dialoguer les œuvres de Chaïm Soutine (1893–1943), peintre de l’École de Paris d’origine russe (actuelle Biélorussie) et de Willem de Kooning (1904–1997), expressionniste abstrait américain d’origine néerlandaise. Cette exposition s’attache plus spécifiquement à explorer l’impact de la peinture de Soutine sur la vision picturale du grand peintre américain.

Soutine a en effet marqué la génération des peintres d’après-guerre par la force expressive de sa peinture et sa figure d’“artiste maudit”, aux prises avec les vicissitudes et les excès de la bohême parisienne.

Son œuvre a été particulièrement visible aux États-Unis entre les années 1930 et 1950, moment où l’artiste figuratif de tradition européenne est relu à l’aune des théories artistiques nouvelles. La peinture gestuelle et l’empâtement prononcé des toiles de Soutine conduisent critiques et commissaires d’exposition à le proclamer “prophète”, héraut de l’expressionnisme abstrait américain. C’est précisément au tournant des années 1950 que Willem de Kooning entame le chantier pictural des Woman, toiles dans lesquelles se construit un expressionnisme singulier, entre figuration et abstraction. L’élaboration de ce nouveau langage correspond au moment où le peintre convoque l’univers artistique de Chaïm Soutine et s’y confronte. De Kooning découvre les tableaux de son prédécesseur dès les années 1930, puis à la rétrospective qui consacre le peintre au Museum of Modern Art à New York en 1950. Il sera particulièrement marqué ensuite par la présentation des toiles de Soutine dans les collections de la Fondation Barnes de Philadelphie, où il se rend avec sa femme Elaine en juin 1952.

Mieux que tout autre artiste de sa génération, de Kooning a su déceler la tension entre les deux pôles apparemment opposés de l’œuvre de Soutine : une recherche de structure doublée d’un rapport passionné à l’histoire de l’art, et une tendance prononcée à l’informel. L’œuvre de Soutine devient alors une référence permanente pour l’artiste américain. De Kooning, qui cherche à dégager sa peinture de l’antagonisme art figuratif / art abstrait en élaborant une « troisième voie » originale, trouve dans l’art de Soutine une légitimation de sa propre pratique.

L’exposition met en dialogue les univers singuliers de ces deux artistes au travers d’une cinquantaine d’œuvres articulées autour de thématiques essentielles : la tension entre la figure et l’informe, la peinture de la « chair », la pratique picturale « gestuelle » des deux artistes. Ces moments thématiques sont ponctués de remises en perspective historiques, par l’évocation de la rétrospective de Soutine au MoMA en 1950 et de la visite de de Kooning à la Fondation Barnes en 1952. 

Cette proposition, la première sur ce sujet, s’inscrit dans la ligne de programmation d’expositions temporaires que porte le musée de l’Orangerie autour de sa collection, notamment autour de celle de Paul Guillaume à la suite d’Apollinaire. Le regard du poète (2016), de Dada Africa, sources et influences extra-occidentales (2017), de Giorgio de Chirico. La peinture métaphysique (2020) et rejoint la question de la réception américaine, faisant suite à Nymphéas. L’abstraction américaine et le dernier Monet (2018).

Commissariat :
Claire Bernardi, conservatrice au musée d’Orsay
Simonetta Fraquelli, commissaire, Fondation Barnes, Philadelphie

L’exposition est organisée avec la Fondation Barnes, Philadelphie où elle a été présentée du 7 mars au 8 août 2021. Elle bénéficie du soutien de la Fondation de Kooning, New York.

Chaïm Soutine / Willem de Kooning
Chaïm Soutine / Willem de Kooning. La peinture incarnée
Catalogue de l'exposition
Couverture du catalogue / epmo
Format 230 pages, 24,8 × 31 cm, environ 84 illustrations
Français + textes traduits en anglais en fin d’ouvrage
Coédition Musées d’Orsay et de l’Orangerie / Hazan 

Musée de l’Orangerie
Jardin des Tuileries, Place de la Concorde, 75001 Paris

30/05/12

Exposition Soutine, Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris, 2012-2013


Chaïm Soutine (1893-1943) : l'ordre du chaos, Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris3 octobre 2012 - 21 janvier 2013

Une exposition rétrospective d'oeuvres du peintre russe CHAIN SOUTINE est organisée par le Musée de l'Orangerie à Paris cet automne jusqu'au 21 janvier 2013. L'exposition présentera des tableaux de Chaïm Soutine réalisés au cours des années 1920 et 1930 offrant un point de vue expressionniste original sur le Paris d'avant-guerre. Figure marquante de l'art moderne, on regrette parfois que les tableaux de Soutine ne bénéficient pas de la reconnaissance qu'ils méritent, tout au moins de la part du grand public.

Au centre des oeuvres présentées figurent des tableaux acquis par le marchand collectionneur parisien Paul Guillaume (1891-1934) et conservés au Musée de l'Orangerie depuis 1984. La collection Paul Guillaume qui regroupe un total de 144 tableaux comprend 22 peintures de Chaïm Soutine. Le lien précédent vous permet d'accéder à une présentation de cette collection exceptionnelle de chef d'oeuvres rassemblés par un amoureux de l'art.

Les œuvres de Chaïm SOUTINE dans la Collection Jean Walter et Paul Guillaume
Ces oeuvres remarquables ont été réalisée par le peintre entre 1918 et 1934 :

La Maison blanche [vers 1918]
Paysage avec personnage [vers 1918 - 1919]
La Table [vers 1919]
Glaïeuls [vers 1919]
Le Gros Arbre bleu [vers 1920 - 1921]
Les Maisons [vers 1920 - 1921]
Paysage [vers 1922 - 1923]
Portrait d'homme (Emile Lejeune) [vers 1922 - 1923]
Le Petit Pâtissier [vers 1922 - 1923]
La Fiancée [vers 1923]
Le Village [vers 1923]
Boeuf et tête de veau [vers 1923]
Arbre couché [vers 1923 - 1924]
Dindon et tomates [vers 1923 - 1924]
Le Lapin [vers 1923 - 1924]
Nature morte au faisan [vers 1924]
Garçon d'honneur [vers 1924 - 1925]
Le Dindon [vers 1925]
Le Poulet plumé [vers 1925]
Le Garçon d'étage [vers 1927]
Enfant de choeur [vers 1927 - 1928]
La Jeune Anglaise [vers 1934]

Le Musée de l'Orangerie entend à travers cette exposition rétrospective offrir un nouveau regard sur l'oeuvre de Chaïm Soutine dont le musée regrette qu'elle ne soit pas davantage reconnue. L'artiste Chaïm Soutine est en effet une figure de l'art moderne qui mérite d'être redécouverte. Les commissaires de l'exposition souhaitent nous y aider.

Site du Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris : www.musee-orangerie.fr


Chaïm Soutine en DVD

Deux films documentaires sont diffusés tous les jours dans la salle audiovisuelle du musée de l'Orangerie
- A la recherche de Soutine (1992), Réalisation : Jean-Marie Drot - 52mn
- Chaïm Soutine (2007), Réalisation : Valérie Firla et Murielle Levy – 52mn – Ce documentaire repose sur un long travail de recherche au cours duquel les deux réalisatrices ont pu rencontrer les derniers témoins de la vie de Chaïm Soutine. Ce documentaire, auquel Zabou Breitman a prêté sa voix, offre une très éclairante présentation à la fois des oeuvres de Soutine et l’homme. Un DVD co-produit par Les Productions du Golem, France 3 Sud et la Réunion des musées nationaux est disponible. Informations : www.lesproductionsdugolem.org


Archived posts in english about exhibitions of works by the artist Chaim Soutine:
Chaim Soutine at the Pinacotheque in Paris, 2007-2008
Chaim Soutine at the Cheim & Read gallery in New York, 2006

14/10/07

Chaim Soutine, Pinacotheque de Paris


Chaïm Soutine
Pinacothèque de Paris
October 10, 2007 - January 27, 2008

A central figure in the artworld, the least well-known and the most mysterious in his own generation of artists, Chaim Soutine (1893-1943) was the focus of a major exhibition in Paris for the first time in 33 years, in the Orangerie.

Chaim Soutine arrived in Paris in July 1913 and discovered a world far removed from his native Russia. He was very soon classified as a Jewish immigrant, as a typical artist of the Ecole de Paris, with all the prejudices that that entailed. Frequently regarded as no more than a follower, he was part of the Montparnasse legend thanks to his friendship with Modigliani, to whom he was extremely close.

It was while studying Soutine’s portrait by Modigliani that Marc Restellini decided to put on this exhibition. In that sublime portrait, he discovered that the handsome Italian endowed Soutine,  as discreetly as possible, with a religious symbolism by painting him with his left hand carrying out the Cohen’s benediction, that family of High priests in the Temple of Jerusalem. This deliberately secretive detail revealed an out-of-the common personality that might have escaped everyone but which Modigliani nonetheless wanted to immortalize, as though to confer a  mystical dimension on Soutine.

His exceptional personality led him to develop an artform that was misunderstood for a long while, marginalized, often linked to the notion of a difficult, unhealthy artist, on whom all the clichés of the ambient anti-Semitism were heaped, and which turned him into an outcast from his very first arrival in Paris. Like Modigliani, he had a most unusual career, wrapped in legends; a doomed artist, he died without having ever been fully appreciated in his lifetime. Even nowadays the only image left of Soutine is that of a Jewish immigrant bowed under the weight of all the taboos of an overly restrictive religion and whose physical appearance lent itself to every kind of antiSemitic cliché.

It was high time that a Parisian institution put an end to all these outdated notions and paid a deserved homage to this artist whom it is essential to rediscover.

This exhibition will show a brilliant artist, an inquisitor of souls and minds, through approximately 80 paintings, most of which are totally re-discovered works, exhibited for the very first time. Many canvases were restored for this occasion. The ensemble comes from the most important private collections as well as from international museums: French, Japanese, Swiss and American.

Through his use of portraiture, Soutine examined the personalities of his chosen sitters. He showed up their quintessential characteristics, and drew out of each of them what no other artist had perceived. He was quite rightly described as an Expressionist, and was the only one to have represented that movement in France, whereas it was the very basis of all the developing movements, be it in Germany and in Austria at the same period. A true visionary, he transcended reality to transform it into an imaginary representation about a century ahead of his time. On the cusp of several movements still in their infancy, he based his art on the most classical and the most illustrious of his fore-runners (Rembrandt, Courbet, Corot, Cézanne….) to become the major precursor of the greatest contemporary artists from Pollock to De Kooning. He was a reference for all of the Cobra movement, as well as for Bacon, whose pictorial powerfulness descends directly from Soutine. 

Today the Pinacothèque de Paris wants to throw a new light on the works by this essential artist from the start of the 20th century, thanks to loans shown for the first and, quite probably, the last time. 

The very well documented catalogue, will provide us with a closer look at all of the essential aspects that make up Soutine’s powerfulness and uniqueness: his links to Judaism, his critical heritage, his triangular relationship with Albert Barnes and Paul Guillaume which led him to fame and fortune, his artistic characteristics, as well as his cultural links with the past and the future, his passion for series like that of Monet, and his powers of anticipation. 

These many features will totally renew the look cast upon Chaim Soutine’s body of work that Jacqueline Munck, Sophie Krebs, Claudine Gramont and Marc Restellini aim to emphasize. 

Overall curator of the exhibition : Marc Restellini

Pinacothèque de Paris - 28, Place de la Madeleine  - 75008 Paris
Web site : www.pinacotheque.com

19/06/06

Chaim Soutine and Modern Art at Cheim & Read, NYC

Soutine and Modern Art: 
The New Landscape / The New Still Life 
Cheim & Read, New York
June 22 - September 8, 2006

Willem de Kooning chose Chaim Soutine as his "favorite artist," one whose paintings "had a glow that came from within." Jack Tworkov spoke of "his [Soutine's] completely impulsive use of pigment as a material, generally thick, slow-flowing and viscous, with a sensual attitude toward it, as if it were the primordial material, with deep and vibratory color." Clement Greenberg wrote that "one has to go back to Rembrandt to find anything to which his touch can be likened."

Cheim & Read announced: The New Landscape / The New Still Life: Soutine and Modern Art, an exhibition featuring the landscapes and still lifes of Chaim Soutine in conjunction with works by contemporary painters and sculptors from the post-war generation to the present. Artists who have acknowledged the importance of Chaim Soutine to the development of their art and whose work reveals shared elements of expression and style include: Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, Jean Dubuffet, Philip Guston, Lucian Freud, Frank Auerbach, Leon Kossoff, Georg Baselitz, Joan Mitchell, Richard Diebenkorn, Milton Resnick, Jack Tworkov, Alice Neel, Bill Jensen, Louise Fishman, Susan Rothenberg, Avigdor Arikha, Philippe Pasqua, Louise Bourgeois and Joel Shapiro. In embracing the unique power and vision of the earlier artist, these contemporary masters have also succeeded in bringing Soutine into the central stream of modern art history. 

The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue published by Cheim & Read with text by Maurice Tuchman and Esti Dunow, co-curators of the exhibition and authors of the Chaim Soutine catalogue raisonné.

Soutine and Modern Art: The New Landscape / The New Still Life 
Cheim & Read's exhibition catalogue
(c) Cheim & Read, 2006

The curators have opted to focus specifically on the landscapes and still lifes vision of Chaim Soutine, rather than his equally important portraits, and on the relationship between these works and that of twenty-one artists of the past half-century. 

All modern artists carry with them the consciousness of past art, and often incorporate into their work elements from vastly different periods and schools that resonate with their own souls. But few modern artists are especially eager to identify any particular predecessor as their major source, since no artist in this day and age wants to be perceived as a follower (and indeed none of the artists in this exhibition would ever be regarded as such). Be that as it may, the response of contemporary artists to the work and legacy of Chaim Soutine is of a profoundly different kind. 
"Repeatedly," the curators write, they "have been struck and at times even surprised by the spontaneous outpouring of praise for the work of Chaim Soutine by each and every artist contacted. This includes statements made decades ago by artists such as Francis Bacon, Willem de Kooning, Philip Guston, Jean Dubuffet and Richard Diebenkorn. When artists look at Soutine, something else comes into play: in fact there are two decisive factors: the essential vision of Chaim Soutine's expressiveness, his natural masterly painterly powers; and his poignant status as an Outsider in the history of modernism."
Indeed, since World War II, the truest champions of Chaim Soutine, who have demonstrated consistent and unflagging commitment to Soutine, whether overtly or subconsciously, have been the artists. To this broad generalization one must add the names of these influential art historians and critics: Meyer Schapiro, Clement Greenberg, David Sylvester. Professor Schapiro, with the image of Soutine's paintings on view at MoMA in 1950, suggested to De Kooning that Woman I was successful and a finished work, and urged that it not be destroyed by de Kooning, as he was actively considering. Greenberg, also at this time, claimed that Soutine's painterly touch could be likened only to Rembrandt, in an essay read by most every prominent art world figure at the time. David Sylvester's dedication to Soutine in his 1963 Arts Council exhibition at London's Tate Gallery altered the course of painting in London for decades to come, as can be seen today in the strong paintings of Cecily Brown and Jenny Saville.

Painters such as Francis Bacon acknowledged the shock of liberation when encountering Soutine in the London galleries in the late 1930s. Bill Jensen speaks of his epiphany at seeing Soutine's Beef in the Minneapolis Institute of Art as a teenager. Similar statements of acknowledgment, often in extremely vivid language, were expressed by virtually all the break-through artists of the post-war period: de Kooning, Dubuffet, Philip Guston, Georg Baselitz and the subsequent generations of serious painters – that is, artists consumed by their search for seeing, artists not inspired in the main by the advantages of the camera (although often benefiting from photography) or by the sometimes academic strictures of Conceptualism. 

Soutine's example contributed to the formation and development of many artists' work. In other cases, artists independently developed their work and found affinities in Soutine that validated and encouraged their own efforts.

This exhibition will demonstrate these influences and affinities – readily visible with certain artists in a common energy, brushwork, and all-over gesture, or a shared approach to subject matter; with others, less apparently so but fully ingested and transformed.

The exhibition features loans from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery (their monumental Soutine Carcass of Beef) and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (a Soutine masterpiece, View of Cagnes) and many prominent private collectors and galleries. Some works are for sale.

Following Chaim Soutine Cheim & Read organized an exhibition of new paintings and sculpture by Donald Baechler, September 14 - October 28, 2006 and after an exhibition of new work by Jannis Kounellis, November 2, 2006 - January 6, 2007

CHEIM & READ gallery's website: www.cheimread.com.

05/03/00

Paris in New York: French Jewish Artists in Private Collections. Exhibition at The Jewish Museum, New York

Paris in New York
French Jewish Artists in Private Collections
Jewish Museum, New York
March 5 - June 25, 2000

he Jewish Museum will present Paris in New York: French Jewish Artists in Private Collections, an exhibition of paintings and sculpture by Jewish artists working in Paris in the first third of the 20th century, from March 5 through June 25, 2000. Paris in New York will feature 38 works by 12 artists, including Marc Chagall, Sonia Delaunay, Mané-Katz, Moïse Kisling, Jacques Lipchitz, Louis Marcoussis, Amedeo Modigliani, Elie Nadelman, Chana Orloff, Jules Pascin, Chaim Soutine, and Max Weber, all of whom found inspiration in the vibrant and beautiful City of Light. The exhibition covers the most innovative years of the School of Paris, from 1907 to 1939. With the majority of the paintings and sculpture borrowed from private collections in the New York area - and supplemented with major examples from The Jewish Museum's collection - Paris in New York brings into public view works rarely seen before.

These predominantly East European artists settled in Paris in the first decade of the twentieth century. Paris was a mecca for Jewish artists from diverse geographic, economic and religious backgrounds until the disruption by the encroaching threat of Nazi Germany at the end of the 1930s. Originally attracted to the cosmopolitan culture of the city, which was a haven for bohemians and foreigners alike at the turn of the century, most of this community was dispersed by the onset of World War II. But during their time in Paris, these artists were nurtured by the city's dynamic environment and the creative energy of their peers, who together made significant contributions to the stylistic development of French modernist art.

Exhibition highlights include Marc Chagall's Rabbi, ca. 1931, a gouache and watercolor from The Jewish Museum's collection, which was once owned by George Gershwin, and was a bequest to the Museum by Frances Gershwin Godowsky and family in honor of Gershwin. Two bronze sculptures of a husband and wife by Chana Orloff - Madame Peretz Hirshbein, 1924, part of the Museum's collection, and Portrait of Peretz Hirshbein, 1924, in the collection of his son, Omus Hirshbein - are being reunited in this exhibition. Peretz Hirshbein was a Yiddish dramatist and novelist. Amedeo Modigliani's Portrait of Anna (Hanka) Zborowska, 1916, depicts the common-law wife of the Polish poet Leopold Zborowski, who was Modigliani's primary dealer. Zborowski provided the artist with support and studio space - and his wife as a frequent model. Moïse Kisling, who was born in Kraków and came to Paris to study art, created Grand nu allongé, Kiki (Large Reclining Nude, Kiki), in 1925. Books have been written about the sexy Queen of Montparnasse, the artist and model Kiki. Jules Pascin's Hermine in a Blue Hat, 1918, depicts the artist's muse who later became his wife. Max Weber's The Apollo in the Matisse Academy, 1908, was painted during Weber's affiliation with Matisse and the small group of painters that Matisse worked with on a regular basis in the early 20th century. A typical late landscape by Chaim Soutine, Landscape at Oisème, ca. 1936, was painted near the country house of the artist’s major patrons, Madeleine and Marcellin Castaing, and suggests the foreboding of the late 1930s.

By 1910, the Montparnasse section of Paris had eclipsed Montmartre as the dominant artists' quarter, and was inhabited by some of the greatest artists of this century, a large number of whom were immigrants. To artists from Central and Eastern Europe, especially Jews, Paris represented not only artistic and personal freedom but also the most advanced and cosmopolitan of cultures. It had an added poignancy for the Jewish artists, especially those from Eastern Europe who were well aware of the discrepancy between their own cultural taboos against visual imagery and France's glory in the visual arts. Paris also represented the world-at-large, the mainstream and spearhead of Western culture, and this was especially important for artists who were leaving a provincial life behind. Montparnasse was the neighborhood in which almost all the Jewish artists lived, worked and socialized. They interacted with the environment of Montparnasse and Paris - the streets, the cafés, the academies - and with each other to produce painting and sculpture which was in the vanguard of artistic creativity.

The Jewish painters and sculptors of the School of Paris have come to be known as the Circle of Montparnasse, a term coined by Kenneth E. Silver in a 1985 exhibition at The Jewish Museum. From about 1907 until shortly after the end of World War I, most of these artists would experiment with new forms in painting and sculpture. Freely associating with the Circle of Montparnasse artists were Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, and many other pivotal figures of the period. Inspiration was also provided by the Post-Impressionism of Paul Gauguin, Vincent Van Gogh and Paul Cézanne whose works were widely exhibited in Paris in 1906 and 1907.

By 1906, the painters Sonia Delaunay, Amedeo Modigliani, Jules Pascin, and Max Weber had arrived in Paris. Weber, who came from America, experimented with the violent color juxtapositions and exuberant paint handling of the Fauves. This group, which included Matisse, first exhibited together in the 1905 Salon d’Automne. The solidly modeled subjects in the Bulgarian Pascin’s portraits and genre scenes reflect the influence of Cézanne and the Fauves. Delaunay was born in Russia and became, with her husband, Robert, a pioneer of non-objective painting. Modigliani, the Italian, upheld a modernist classicism, linked as it was to the Italian masters he revered. His paintings reflect an admiration of Cézanne, but he also achieved a unique expressiveness with his elongated, quietly serene portraits.

The Polish-born Elie Nadelman, influenced by Classical antiquities, pursued a stylized classicism. His bronze sculptures were collected early on by the cosmetics giant Helena Rubinstein, and his drawings by Leo Stein, whose sister, Gertrude, settled in Paris in 1902. Several of the Jewish artists were early exponents of the still-new forms and vocabulary of Cubism, a style characterized by geometric simplifications of form, shifting viewpoints, flattened areas of color and broken contours, with objects and space seeming to merge together. Louis Marcoussis was included in the important Section D’Or exhibition in 1912. Jacques Lipchitz was a pioneer of cubist sculpture. He often used the cubist vocabulary to reinforce a sense of order and clarity in his depictions of acrobats and circus performers. Kisling also explored cubist form in still life paintings. A close friend of Modigliani, the two also collaborated on a number of works prior to the Italian artist’s death in 1920. Kisling often provided Modigliani with studio space.

World War I scattered the Circle of Montparnasse artists in different directions, but many of the group returned to Paris after the war. Both Chagall and Mané-Katz, for example, left for Russia, their homeland, but returned to Paris in the 1920s. Others served in the French Army.

Increasingly, a network of dealers, collectors, and critics would advance the popularity and commercial success of many of these artists by the 1920s. Despite their foreignness, their painterly, coloristic works and expressionistic styles soon came to represent French modernist painting of the interwar years.

Even with their success, many, like Pascin and Modigliani, in particular, continued to move between bohemia and the world of the well-to-do. As they assimilated into the mainstream Parisian art world, however, some conservative critics drew attention to their Jewishness, often linking their painting style to their religious or ethnic heritage, and this criticism was inextricably linked with increasing nationalism. As Jews they remained outsiders. As artists, they shied away from the avant-garde movements that surfaced in Paris in the wake of World War I such as Dada and Surrealism. Chagall, for example, an early adherent to Cubism before World War I, afterward remained faithful to narrative painting in nostalgic evocations of pre-Revolutionary Russia.

By 1931, the French economy had collapsed in response to worldwide depressions following the 1929 Wall Street stock market crash. In 1933, Hitler was elected Chancellor in Germany. That same year, the French art critic Roger Brielle responded to rising xenophobia and anti-Semitism in an article on Jewish painters written for L’amour de l’art. In reply to conservative critics, Brielle sought to fold the seemingly foreign, mostly Expressionist style of the Jewish painters into the rubric of the national traditions in French art, dubbing it an offshoot of Fauvism. According to art historian Romy Golan, Brielle sought to “remove the stigmas of race and nation from Jewish artists, dealers, and collectors, and instead [to] see their contribution to a community of spirit.” Seven years later, in 1940, with the German occupation, foreign artists were no longer allowed to exhibit their work in Paris. Ironically, after World War II, the vitality and passion of the Expressionist style they had helped forge was irrevocably assimilated into the French national style. Arguably, as Golan explains, Expressionism had become a timeless and universal tendency in art, a badge of honor.

“School of Paris works are highly valued and sought after today and collectors of the works of Jewish artists share not only a love of the beauty of these works, but also an abiding curiosity about the lives of the artists,” notes Joan Rosenbaum, Helen Goldsmith Menschel Director of The Jewish Museum, in the foreword to the exhibition catalogue. Many of the works in the current exhibition have had surprisingly few owners. In the past 15 years, The Jewish Museum has mounted exhibitions devoted to the work of several of the artists in the show. Some evolved out of the Museum’s 1985 exhibition, The Circle of Montparnasse: Jewish Artists in Paris, 1905-1945, such as monographic exhibitions of the works of Chaim Soutine, Marc Chagall and Jacques Lipchitz. Others have examined groups of artists and their relationship to one another, such as the current Berlin Metropolis: Jews and the New Culture, 1890-1918.

The exhibition has been organized by Susan Chevlowe, Associate Curator of Fine Arts at The Jewish Museum.

A 64-page catalogue with 29 color and 15 black-and-white images, published by The Jewish Museum, New York accompanies the exhibition and is available in the Museum's Cooper Shop for $19.95 softcover. Edited by Susan Chevlowe, the book includes a foreword by Joan Rosenbaum, Helen Goldsmith Menschel Director of The Jewish Museum, and an essay by Romy Golan, Associate Professor in the Ph.D. program in art history at The Graduate Center, City University of New York.

JEWISH MUSEUM, NEW YORK
1109 Fifth Avenue at 92nd Street, Manhattan

26/04/98

An Expressionist in Paris: The Paintings of Chaim Soutine at The Jewish Museum, New York

An Expressionist in Paris: 
The Paintings of Chaim Soutine
Jewish Museum, New York
April 26 - August 16, 1998

The Jewish Museum presents a major exhibition of works by the great French painter CHAIM SOUTINE (1893-1943). The exhibition is the first New York museum re-examination of Soutine's paintings in nearly 50 years, the last being the Museum of Modern Art's retrospective in 1950. An Expressionist in Paris: The Paintings of Chaim Soutine includes 56 of the finest and most important works created by the artist known for his highly expressive, gestural and thickly painted canvases. Focusing on the period between Soutine's arrival in Paris in 1913 and his death there during World War II, the show and its accompanying catalogue introduce fresh insights and new research about the artist, his style, his career, and his critical reception. Chaim Soutine raised to a new level of intensity the oil medium's mutability, elasticity, and sculptural potential, extending the "painterly" trajectory that runs from Titian, Rembrandt, and Chardin, through Courbet and Van Gogh. The Jewish Museum's exhibition examines Soutine's place in the history of French art between the wars, and within the larger context of 20th century art, in general, offering visitors a rare opportunity to enjoy his stirring and often provocative paintings. Works are being loaned from major museums and private collections in France, Germany, Switzerland, England, Scotland, the Netherlands, Israel, and the United States.

Chaim Soutine's oeuvre -- consisting primarily of landscapes, still-lifes and portraits -- falls squarely within the inter-war period. Coming to maturity in the immediate post-Cubist moment in Paris, just before the advent of Surrealism, the art of Soutine is not easily characterized. Often called Expressionist, Soutine's art has been described as nervous, distorted, raw and extravagant. However, Soutine is an Expressionist with a difference. The Lithuanian-born Jew was an Expressionist in Paris, not in the Germanic capitals usually associated with that movement. Whether he is grouped among the impoverished and sometimes intemperate peintres maudits ("painters under a curse") with Modigliani and Utrillo; alongside the French painters of brooding, thickly painted canvases like Vlaminck and Roualt; as one of the "naives," with Henri Rousseau; or in the company of the many, non-French, mostly Jewish members of the School of Paris (Ecole de Paris), including Chagall and Lipchitz, Soutine remains apart. He is the very prototype of what has recently been called a "liminal" figure, one at the edges of things, between categories and critical discourses.

Chaim Soutine's emotive, gestural paintings have also been seen as precursors to the works of such Abstract Expressionist masters as Willem de Kooning and Jackson Pollock. Like them, Soutine created a field of frenetic, energized swirls and splotches of paint. His art, like theirs, was the residue of a "process" in which the artist seemed to lose all sense of self in the ecstatic moment of creation.

The Jewish Museum exhibition examines Soutine's initial reception in Paris as a Jew and an immigrant Frenchman, a time during which his dealers and critics positioned his work as "primitive" and its creator as an untutored, foreign-born, divinely inspired genius within the context of painters such as Vincent Van Gogh and Henri Rousseau. The views of Soutine's work changed radically during the 1930s, when he was seen as a "master" -- the last great hope for traditional painting in France, sometimes pitting him against the anti-painterly avant-garde movements of Dada and Surrealism. Finally, the exhibition explores Soutine's reputation in America from the late 1930s to his death in 1943, and during the emergence of American Abstract Expressionism and concurrent European trends of the 1940s and 1950s. Paradoxically, he was simultaneously seen as a link back to the past -- to European shtetl life and the Baroque masters -- and as a "prophet," a Parisian precursor of the expressive abstraction that was taking hold in New York in the wake of World War II and the Holocaust.

Reflecting these different perceptions of the artist, the exhibition is organized in three sections. In terms of the works chosen and the design of the space, each gallery evokes the atmosphere of a different period of Soutine's critical reception - the modernist salon space of the early 1920s, when Dr. Albert Barnes, the eccentric Philadelphia collector, became Soutine's first major patron; the revived classic interiors of his more conservative French patrons Paul Guillaume and Madeleine Castaing in the late 1920s and 1930s; and finally the International Style exhibition spaces of the post-war art museum as exemplified by the Museum of Modern Art in Soutine's first major retrospective in 1950. Through these three distinct environments, the changing interpretations of the artist's work over time from "primitive" genius to "master" painter to "prophet"are explored.

The introductory section of the exhibition presents a preview of what is to come with a representative work from each gallery. The Page Boy at Maxim's, c. 1927, is the first work visitors see as they enter the exhibition. Displaying the emotionally charged brushwork and distorted image of the sitter, characteristic of Soutine's portraits, The Page Boy -- with hand outstretched -- ushers the visitor into the introductory section as he insolently demands his tip.

Some of Soutine's earliest critics saw him as a "primitive" genius. This is reflected in Still Life with Herrings, a c. 1916, which owes its somber palate and stark geometric forms to the late works of Fauves such as André Derain. The work was seen by critics as conveying the poverty of the artist's early career as well as the deprivations of his life in the shtetl of Smilovitchi. In the gallery representing Chaim Soutine as a "master painter," The Pastry Cook, c. 1927, belongs to a series of the artist's paintings depicting the uniformed, serving class, updating the tradition of representing Parisian "types" from popular imagery of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. Where earlier images show anecdotal detail of the sitter's profession, Soutine focused on the individuality of his subjects and their personal assertiveness. Village Square, Céret, c. 1921-22, reflects Soutine at his most abstract and explosive, qualities examined in the third gallery of the exhibition. While certain details of the village square are discernable -- the clock tower, the houses and the mountains in the background -- they dissolve in the violent swirls of Soutine's brushwork. One can see in the slashing brushwork what Willem de Kooning found so appealing in Soutine's painting.

Evaluating Soutine's importance at mid-century, one French critic wrote, "Soutine touched the limits of figurative expressionism, and opened it toward the future." This important exhibition of paintings by Chaim Soutinel provides visitors with an expanded understanding of his works and introduce new perspectives from which Soutine's contribution to the history of painting may be appreciated.

Chaim Soutine was born in 1893 in Smilovitchi, near Minsk, in White Russia. In 1910 he enrolled at the Art Academy in Vilna; and in 1913 he moved to Paris, where he met Modigliani, Chagall, Leger, Cendras, and Laurens. During the 1920s he went to Céret, Cagnes, and Châtel-Guyon, where he produced much of his early work. Dr. Albert Barnes, the famous Philadelphia art collector, discovered Soutine's work in 1922-23, and he purchased fifty-two of the artist's paintings. During the next two decades, Soutine was supported by his influential patrons, Marcellin and Madeleine Castaing. In 1941 Soutine fled Paris, in fear of the Nazis, and spent the next years in hiding in the French countryside. He died, of perforated ulcers, in August of 1943.

An Expressionist in Paris: The Paintings of Chaim Soutine has been organized by Norman L. Kleeblatt, Susan and Elihu Rose Curator of Fine Arts, The Jewish Museum, and Kenneth E. Silver, Associate Professor of Fine Arts, New York University. 

Following its New York showing, An Expressionist in Paris: The Paintings of Chaim Soutine will be on view at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art from September 17, 1998 to January 3, 1999, and at the Cincinnati Art Museum from February 14 to May 2, 1999.

A 208-page catalogue with 32 color and 120 black and white illustrations, with a foreword by Joan Rosenbaum and an introduction and major essays by curators Norman L. Kleeblatt and Kenneth E. Silver, as well as contributions by Esti Dunow, Colette Giraudon, Romy Golan, Billy Klüver and Julie Martin, Donald Kuspit, Pascal Neveux, Ellen Pratt, and Mira Goldfarb Berkowitz, accompanies the exhibition. Published by The Jewish Museum, New York, and Prestel, it is available from The Jewish Museum's Cooper Shop for $65 hardcover and $29.95 paperback. This comprehensive, groundbreaking book features unique presentations and information never before published, including a photomontage composed of rare photographs of the artist, newly discovered correspondence between Soutine and the French art historian Elie Faure, and the first radiographic analysis of the artist's work, which brings to light new evidence about Soutine's use of materials and his process of painting.

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