Yuma Sun

Museum spotlights link between Matisse, Alaska

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PHOENIX — Nearly 64 years after his death, Henri Matisse has become one of the few non-Native Americans to have an exhibition at a Phoenix museum dedicated to Native American culture.

The little-known intersecti­on of one of the 20th century’s greatest artists and Inuit people in the Arctic region is at the heart of a show opening Monday at the Heard Museum.

“It’s a story I didn’t know much about until 1998 when I became friendly with a member of the Matisse family,” said museum director David Roche. “It truly took several years to absorb it all. It spans centuries, cultures and continents.”

“Yua: Henri Matisse and the Inner Arctic Spirit” will feature Matisse’s portraits of the Inuit people, which have never been displayed in the U.S. But the French artist, who died in 1954, will share the spotlight with Alaska Natives who influenced him. Yup’ik masks made by Alaskan Natives, some of which were collected by Matisse’s son-inlaw during World War II, will be just as much a part of the exhibit.

The Heard is the only place showcasing the unconventi­onal pairing.

“We have a lot of historic firsts in this particular work,” said curator Sean Mooney. “We’re kind of doing an exhibition within an exhibition by having these two parallel displays of historic Yup’ik masks and this very specific historic body of work by Matisse.”

Matisse is more widely lauded as a pioneer in Fauvism — a style characteri­zed by vivid colors and less controlled brush strokes. But he became interested in indigenous cultures in the 1940s. Sonin-law Georges Duthuit had acquired an array of the masks and other materials while living in New York City as World War II broke out, Mooney said. In 1946, Duthuit returned to France with his collection.

He and Matisse’s daughter, Marguerite, suggested Matisse do three illustrati­ons for a proposed book on the Arctic people. He made 50.

Matisse, according to Mooney, looked at masks made of wood, feathers and other materials, and two books with photograph­s of Inuit men and women. The museum will have several black-and-white portraits, including charcoal drawings and lithograph­s. Taken with the culture, Matisse even began referring to any portrait he did as a mask.

“With a stroke, he created what he called masks,” said co-curator Chuna McIntyre, who is Central Yup’ik. “He got the essence. It’s amazing — pared down, quiet interior, personal creations.”

Villagers would traditiona­lly tell stories with the masks through song or dance, paying respect to “yua.” According to the Yup’ik culture, “yua” means spirit but can also refer to the spirit inside living creatures, inanimate objects and their connection to each other.

“Everything that exists in this universe has the potential of yua because it exists here. That’s an old concept in Yup’ik,” McIntyre said. “There’s a whole gravity to it. Yua — it’s in a being, it’s in a person.”

Yup’ik Eskimos comprise one of 11 distinct cultures among Alaska Natives in the southwest part of the state, according to the Alaska Native Heritage Center. Marge Nakak, a cultural host at the center, said masks are traditiona­lly worn at annual festivals between Native villages during a gathering known as a potlatch.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? HEARD MUSEUM MARKETING MANAGER WILLOW SENJAMIN views the final installati­on of a
ASSOCIATED PRESS HEARD MUSEUM MARKETING MANAGER WILLOW SENJAMIN views the final installati­on of a

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