The Borneo Post

When the world was at its worst, Matisse was at his best

- Sebastian Smee

PHILADELPH­IA: Civilizati­on had a total breakdown in the 1930s, which also happened to be the decade when Henri Matisse became most himself.

“Matisse in the 1930s,” a groundbrea­king exhibition at the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art, presents this miraculous, joyous phenomenon — a great artist, having just turned age 60, fully coming into his own. But the spectacle is haunted by history.

If you want to try to reconcile Matisse’s stream of gorgeous, lifeenhanc­ing inventions in those years with the Great Depression, the rise of fascism, civil war in Spain, the Nazis’ demonizati­on of modern art (including Matisse’s) as “degenerate,” the statespons­ored persecutio­n of Jews and the terrifying buildup to the Holocaust, you might as well fold your cards. It is not possible.

You can only remind yourself that Matisse was not in control of world events.

In fact, he was barely in control of himself. His intense susceptibi­lity to visual beauty and his acute artistic intelligen­ce had made him, in the eyes of many, a radical.

He had spent most of his career out on a ledge, blasted by the high winds of public mockery.

But he was a father, a family man, a good citizen, and he yearned for sympathy and respect.

Ledges are lonely places. So for more than a decade, beginning in late 1917, Matisse stepped back from the precipice.

He moved from Paris to Nice. He painted smaller canvases nudes and interiors influenced by Impression­ism and Orientalis­m - modeling spaces and volumes with perspectiv­e lines and shifts in tone. I personally adore the work that emerged from Matisse’s “Nice period.”

But there is no denying that, by the end of the 1920s, Matisse was becoming repetitive. He was creatively blocked.

“In front of the canvas,” he wrote to his daughter, “I have no ideas whatever.”

He needed to up the ante. “Matisse in the 1930s,” which was organized by Matthew Affron, Cécile Debray and Claudine Grammont, shows us exactly how he did that. It is the most important Matisse exhibition in America for many years.

Matisse was extraordin­ary in every phase of his career. But it was not until the 1930s that he successful­ly integrated all the aspects of his originalit­y - in conception, drawing, color, treatment of space, emotional register.

In the process he achieved a kind of mastery.

The struggle was unrelentin­g. But everything that followed, right up to the late paper cutouts and the chapel in Vence, would be a kind of playing out of that mastery.

The decade began with three key developmen­ts.

The first was a series of Matisse retrospect­ives, all staged consecutiv­ely in 1930-31 in Berlin; Paris; Basel, Switzerlan­d; and New York. Retrospect­ives were rare in those days. Four in two years was unpreceden­ted and a clear sign that the world was catching up with the French artist. He was, as art historian Éric de Chassey writes in the catalogue, “incontesta­bly one of the best-selling and most respected artists of his time.”

“Retrospect­ion” means looking back, thinking about the past. But what Matisse drew from these four retrospect­ives was that he wanted to look forward.

“He wanted to be an artist who opened a path rather than closed it,” writes de Chassey, “a pioneer rather than an inheritor.”

The Impression­ist space and atmosphere of his Nice period pictures was the past. He needed to leave it behind.

The second key developmen­t was travel.

In February 1930, Matisse traveled to

New York, then proceeded by deluxe train to Chicago, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and San Francisco, before crossing the Pacific Ocean by ship to Tahiti. He made almost no art during this trip.

But he absorbed everything. His mind and heart were refreshed.

The third was a commission from Albert Barnes, the American collector and evangelist for modern art.

Barnes wanted Matisse to adorn the arched walls of the main gallery in his foundation in Merion, a suburb of Philadelph­ia.

So on a second trip to America that same year, Matisse went there. Relations with Barnes would later become fraught.

But the commission, the results of which you can see for yourself if you walk 10 minutes down the road to the relocated Barnes Foundation, allowed him to advance and deepen his conception of the “decorative.”

Matisse was focused on distillati­on in these years. He wanted to marry a sense of voluptuous sensuality with order and elegance - the Dionysian with the Apollonian.

The first step was to flatten out the space in his pictures. Flattening the picture (as he had done in his pre-Nice paintings) implied giving negative and positive space equal weight. Negative space could now take on a more active role.

More specifical­ly, Matisse understood that if he wanted to combine a sense of living, breathing expansion with harmonious order, he would need to distort the contours and proportion­s of his figures until they were in just the right relationsh­ip with the space around them.

I have not mentioned color. But of course, it was all about color.

One basic thing Matisse had realized was that color intensity was a function of size. A large area of blue was not just a larger area of blue, it was more intensely blue.

That put it in a different relationsh­ip with the areas of color around it.

You can think of Matisse’s sophistica­ted, intuitive approach to color in terms of barometric pressure: He orchestrat­ed areas of high pressure (smaller color areas, more visible brushstrok­es and contour lines, more frequent alternatio­ns) with low pressure (larger, airier expanses of pure, unmodulate­d color) until he had balanced calm and turbulence, order and sensuality in just the right way.

The Philadelph­ia show kicks off with a prologue - a smattering of Nice period works, including the busily patterned “Odalisque With Grey Trousers” and the ravishing “Woman With a Veil.” Both accentuate background colors and shapes over the central subject, offering a preview of what was to come. The next section examines the Barnes mural and a commission to illustrate a book of Stéphane Mallarmé’s poems. Subsequent galleries focus on Matisse’s easel paintings; his painted tapestry cartoons; pictures of his assistant and model, Lydia Delectorsk­aya; his collaborat­ion with Léonide Massine and the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo; and the suites of drawings he made, in themeand-variation mode, after an operation for abdominal cancer in January 1941.

The individual paintings, drawings and sculptures - it goes without saying - are insanely, almost unconscion­ably beautiful. But what makes the unfurling phenomenon of Matisse’s career so compelling is the struggle - or what the Greeks called “agon.”

In Greek theater, the “agon” describes the tension between the protagonis­t and the antagonist which, never reconciled, leads ineluctabl­y to tragedy. (Ineluctabl­e means “not to be escaped by struggling.”) You can find analogies for this “agon” in the tension in Matisse’s paintings between positive and negative space (with neither getting the upper hand) or, more broadly, in Matisse’s attempts to balance the Apollonian with the Dionysian.

But there was also - as there is today - a contest between Matisse’s harmonious, beautiful vision and the political sphere, with its everdeepen­ing rancor, ugliness and strife. The two things could not be reconciled. Nor could they be kept apart: Matisse’s beloved daughter, Marguerite, was tortured and interrogat­ed by the Gestapo for her work with the French Resistance. She narrowly escaped death, unlike millions of others. Matisse is profound. This show is sensationa­lly beautiful. But just as Matisse worked hard to activate the negative space in his 1930s works, something about our present-day politics activates the historical background to this exhibition.

“I barely thought about it while I was in the exhibition, but in retrospect, there is something truly tragic about the apotheosis of so great an artist coinciding with baseness and barbarity on such a vast scale. — The Washington Post

 ?? ?? Henri Matisse’s ‘Nymph in the Forest (Verdure)’. Oil on canvas.
Henri Matisse’s ‘Nymph in the Forest (Verdure)’. Oil on canvas.
 ?? ?? Henri Matisse’s “Window at Tahiti II,” 1935. Gouache on canvas.
Henri Matisse’s “Window at Tahiti II,” 1935. Gouache on canvas.
 ?? ?? Henri Matisse’s ‘Woman With a Veil,’ 1927. Oil on canvas.
Henri Matisse’s ‘Woman With a Veil,’ 1927. Oil on canvas.
 ?? ?? Henri Matisse’s “Daisies,” 1939. Oil on canvas. — Photos by Art Institute of Chicago/Succession H. Matisse/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Henri Matisse’s “Daisies,” 1939. Oil on canvas. — Photos by Art Institute of Chicago/Succession H. Matisse/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

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