Showing posts with label Philippe Halsman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Philippe Halsman. Show all posts

23/04/24

Jean Cocteau @ Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice – "Jean Cocteau: The Juggler’s Revenge" – Exhibition Curated by Kenneth E. Silver

Jean Cocteau: The Juggler’s Revenge 
Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice 
Organized by Kenneth E. Silver  
April 13 – September 16, 2024

Jean Cocteau by Philippe Halsman
Philippe Halsman: Jean Cocteau, New York, USA. 1949
© Philippe Halsman / Magnum Photos

The Peggy Guggenheim Collection presents Jean Cocteau: The Juggler’s Revenge, the largest retrospective ever organized in Italy dedicated to Jean Cocteau (1889–1963), the enfant terrible of the French twentieth-century art scene.

Organized by eminent Cocteau specialist and New York University art historian Kenneth E. Silver, the exhibition highlights the artist’s versatility, the multiple juggling acts that distinguished his production, which often drew criticism from his contemporaries. Loans from prestigious institutions, such as the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, the Phoenix Art Museum, the Nouveau Musée National de Monaco, and the Musée Jean Cocteau, Collection Séverin Wunderman in Menton, as well as major private collections, including the Cartier Collection, gather over one hundred and fifty works in an impressive variety of media. These include drawings, graphics, jewelry, tapestries, historical documents, books, magazines, photographs, documentaries, and films directed by Cocteau, which trace the development of this multifaced artist’s unique and highly personal aesthetics, alongside the highlights of his tumultuous career.

Among the most influential figures of the twentieth century, Jean Cocteau was impressively prolific. He referred to himself as a poet, but he was also a novelist, playwright, and critic whose subjects ranged from art and music to other expository forms such as travel writing and memoirs. At the same time, he was also a gifted, highly original, and innovative visual artist. This side of the artist’s creative life is focus of the exhibition organized by the Peggy Guggenheim Collection: Cocteau the draftsman, graphic artist, muralist, fashion-jewelry-and-textile designer, and filmmaker. For his eclectic nature, he could easily be described as a modern-age “Renaissance man,” whose extraordinary versatility left an indelible mark on twentieth-century art. A key figure of the French art scene of his time, his circle included such artists as Josephine Baker, Coco Chanel, Sergei Diaghilev, Edith Piaf, Pablo Picasso, and Tristan Tzara. However, the frank assertion of his homosexuality and the opium addiction he never attempted to conceal, meant he occupied a precarious position within the avant-garde. A man of the French establishment yet subversive of it, Cocteau embodied the cultural, social, and political contradictions of his age. 

The Peggy Guggenheim Collection is an especially appropriate place to host the most comprehensive exhibition ever dedicated to Jean Cocteau in Italy, not least because of his long-lasting friendship with the U.S. patron. In fact, it was with an exhibition of Cocteau’s drawings, at the suggestion of Marcel Duchamp, that Peggy Guggenheim began her career in the art world at her London gallery, Guggenheim Jeune, in 1938. The show displayed numerous costume designs for characters the artist had created for his play, The Knights of the Round Table (1937), as well as two large-scale drawings on lined bed sheets created specifically for the exhibition. As Guggenheim recounted in her autobiography, Out of This Century (1979): “One was an allegorical subject called La peur donnant ailes au Courage, which included a portrait of the actor Jean Marais. He and two decadent looking figures appeared with pubic hairs.” The work’s daring subject matter caused a scandal with British customs, and it was only after strenuous negotiations that Guggenheim accepted the compromise of exhibiting the work privately in her office rather than in the exhibition gallery. Cocteau never offered an interpretation of this remarkable drawing, which may have been created in support of the antifascist republican cause during the Spanish Civil War. The work remained in Guggenheim’s collection and travelled with her to Venice, before being sold to a distant American relative who in turn donated it to the Phoenix Art Museum in Arizona. Outside of Italy for the last seventy years, the drawing returns to Palazzo Venier dei Leoni in Venice as a key work reflecting the triadic relationship between Guggenheim, Duchamp, and Cocteau. What is more, Jean Cocteau had a special relationship with Venice, which he first fell in love with and felt transformed by at the age of fifteen. In the years following World War II, he regularly visited the city, attending the Venice Film Festival, creating fanciful renditions of gondoliers, objects at Egidio Costantini’s glassworks in Murano—which he helped revive and personally renamed La Fucina degli Angeli (“The Foundry of the Angels”)—and paying visits to Palazzo Venier dei Leoni. The exhibition also includes a drawing from one of Peggy Guggenheim’s guestbooks, including a letter and a caricature dedicated to her.

The exhibition explores the main themes of Jean Cocteau’s oeuvre: Orpheus and poetry, eros, classicism in art, Venice and his relationship with Peggy Guggenheim, cinema, and his interest in design, expressed in fashion and especially in jewelry and the applied arts. A surprising selection of drawings also highlights the central role of desire in Cocteau’s practice, as well as his ambivalent relationship with Cubism, Dadaism, and Surrealism. A further section also explores his relationship with the world of popular culture, advertising, and film, pointing toward his influence on later artists, including Andy Warhol, Félix Gonzáles-Torres and Pedro Almodóvar. Finally, the exhibition offers a unique opportunity to admire the Academician Sword for Jean Cocteau (1955) designed by the artist and rendered by Cartier in gold, silver, emerald, ruby, diamond, ivory (originally), onyx, and enamel. This exquisitely refined object features a profile of Orpheus, a central figure to Cocteau’s artistic identity for decades, a lyre, and a star, which are recurring symbols in his work. The sword was first unveiled on October 20, 1955, when the artist was elected as a member of the Académie Française.
Jean Cocteau: The Juggler’s Revenge provides an ideal opportunity to revisit the art of Cocteau, and to see him with a fresh 21st-century point of view. His astonishing artistic range--for which, in his lifetime, he was often criticized for spreading himself too thin—now looks prescient, a model for the kind of wideranging cultural fluidity we now expect of contemporary artists. All this, in addition to his more-or-less forthright homosexuality, as well as his very public struggles with drug addiction, make him look especially modern. Perhaps the world has finally caught up with Jean Cocteau.”, says the curator Kenneth E. Silver.
Jean Cocteau. The Juggler’s Revenge
Edited by Marsilio Arte, 2024
176 pages, ENG - ISBN 9791254631683
The exhibition is accompanied by an extensive illustrated catalogue, edited by Marsilio Arte, with essays by curator Kenneth E. Silver and Blake Oetting.
PEGGY GUGGENHEIM COLLECTION, VENICE
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
Palazzo Venier dei Leoni - Dorsoduro 701 - 30123 Venezia

18/05/13

Dali. All of the poetic suggestions and all of the plastic possibilities, Madrid exhibition


Dali. All of the poetic suggestions and all of the plastic possibilities
Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid
Through September 2, 2013

SALVADOR DALI, 1954
Photo by Philippe HALSMAN
(c) Philippe Halsman Archives / Magnum Photos / Contacto

The Museo Reina Sofía presents a major exhibition dedicated to Salvador Dalí, one of the most comprehensive shows yet held on the artist from Ampurdán. Gathered together on this unique occasion are more than 200 works from leading institutions, private collections, and the three principal repositories of Salvador Dalí’s work, the Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalí (Figueres), the Salvador Dalí Museum of St. Petersburg (Florida), and the Museo Reina Sofía (Madrid), which in this way are joining forces to show the public the best of their collections. 

Salvador Dali

The exhibition, a great success with the public when shown recently at the Centre Pompidou in Paris, aims to revalue Dalí as a thinker, writer and creator of a peculiar vision of the world. One exceptional feature is the presence of loans from leading institutions like the MoMA (New York), which is making available the significant work The Persistence of Memory (1931); the Philadelphia Museum of Art, which is lending Soft Construction with Boiled Beans (Premonition of Civil War) (1936); the Tate Modern, whose contribution is Metamorphosis of Narcissus (1937); and the Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Belgium, the lender of The Temptation of Saint Anthony (1946). 

Thirty works which have never before been seen in Spain are on view. Some of the most important are Partial Hallucination: Six Apparitions of Lenin on a Piano, 1931 (Centre Pompidou, Paris); The Angelus of Gala, 1935 (The Museum of Modern Art, New York); Bathers, c. 1928 (The Salvador Dalí Museum, St. Petersburg, Florida); Geopoliticus Child Watching the Birth of the New Man, 1943 (The Salvador Dalí Museum, St. Petersburg, Florida), and Symbole agnostique (Agnostic Symbol), 1932 (Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia). 

Salvador Dali

In the words of the curator Montse Aguer, this exhibition makes it possible for us to analyze Dalí’s artistic oeuvre and the different languages he employs, revealing his poetics to us. His finest work is not limited only to the invention of forms but also extends to poetic invention. In this respect, Dalí should be recognized as a leading renovator of the surrealist vocubulary, intensely committed to investigating the process of representing and interpreting what he observed and perceived.


Salvador Dali

The exhibition is made up of eleven sections containing not only paintings and drawings but also documentary material, photographs, Salvador Dalí’s own manuscripts, magazines and films of enormous importance for an understanding of the artist’s complex universe. The surrealist period constitutes the nucleus of the show at the Museo Reina Sofía, with special emphasis on the paranoiac-critical method developed by the artist as a mechanism for the transformation and subversion of reality. 

A catalogue of the exhibition has been edited and it includes texts of Pere Gimferrer, Thierry Dufrêne, Jean Michel Bouhours and Jean-Hubert Michel. The catalogue reproduces the works of the exhibition. 

The exhibition Dali. All of the poetic suggestions and all of the plastic possibilities was organized by Museo Reina Sofía and Centre Pompidou, Paris, in collaboration with the Salvador Dalí Museum Saint Petersburg (Florida). With the special collaboration of the Fundacio Gala-Salvador Dali, Figueres.

Chief curator: Jean-Hubert Martin - Curators: Montse Aguer (exhibition at the Museo Reina Sofía, Madrid), Jean-Michel Bouhours and Thierry Dufrêne - Coordinator: Aurora Rabanal

The Museo Reina Sofia website: www.museoreinasofia.es