An Eye for Genius: The Collections of Gertrude and Leo Stein
It's easy to see the value of a Picasso painting now. But would you have bought one in 1905, before the artist was known? These siblings did.
- By Arthur Lubow
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
The place looked like a junk shop. Although Vollard was resistant to selling pictures to buyers he didn’t know, Leo coaxed an early Cézanne landscape out of him. When brother Michael informed Gertrude and Leo that an unexpected windfall of $1,600, or 8,000 francs, was due to them, they knew what to do. They would buy art at Vollard’s. Established first-rate artists like Daumier, Delacroix and Manet were so expensive that the budding collectors could only afford minor pictures by them. But they were able to buy six small paintings: two each by Cézanne, Renoir and Gauguin. A few months later, Leo and Gertrude returned to Vollard’s and purchased Madame Cézanne with a Fan, for 8,000 francs. In two months, they had spent some $3,200 (equivalent to about $80,000 today): Never again would they lavish so much so fast on art. Vollard would often say approvingly that the Steins were his only clients who collected paintings “not because they were rich, but despite the fact that they weren’t.”
Leo comprehended Cézanne’s importance very early, and spoke eloquently about it. “Leo Stein began to talk,” the photographer Alfred Stieglitz later recalled. “I quickly realized I had never heard more beautiful English nor anything clearer.” Corresponding with a friend late in 1905, Leo wrote that Cézanne had “succeeded in rendering mass with a vital intensity that is unparalleled in the whole history of painting.” Whatever Cézanne’s subject matter, Leo continued, “there is always this remorseless intensity, this endless unending gripping of the form, the unceasing effort to force it to reveal its absolute self-existing quality of mass....Every canvas is a battlefield and victory an unattainable ideal.”
But Cézanne was too expensive to collect, so the Steins sought out emerging artists. In 1905, Leo stumbled upon Picasso’s work, which was being exhibited at group shows, including one staged in a furniture store. He bought a large gouache (opaque watercolor) by the then obscure 24-year-old artist, The Acrobat Family, later attributed to his Rose Period. Next he purchased a Picasso oil, Girl with a Basket of Flowers, even though Gertrude found it repellent. When he told her at dinner he had bought the picture, she threw down her silverware. “Now you’ve spoiled my appetite,” she declared. Her opinion changed. Years later, she would turn down what Leo characterized as “an absurd sum” from a would-be buyer of Girl with a Basket of Flowers.
At the same time, Leo and Gertrude were warming to Matisse’s harder-to-digest compositions. When the two bought Woman with a Hat at the 1905 Autumn Salon in the Grand Palais, they became the only collectors who had acquired works by both Picasso and Matisse. Between 1905 and 1907, said Alfred Barr Jr., the founding director of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, “[Leo] was possibly the most discerning connoisseur and collector of 20th-century painting in the world.”
Picasso recognized that the Steins could be useful, and he began to cultivate them. He produced flattering gouache portraits of Leo, with an expression that was earnest and profoundly thoughtful, and of a sensitive young Allan. With his companion, Fernande Olivier, he dined at the rue de Fleurus flat. Gertrude later wrote that when she reached for a roll on the table, Picasso beat her to it, exclaiming, “This piece of bread is mine.” She burst out laughing, and Picasso, sheepishly acknowledging that the gesture betrayed his poverty, smiled back. It sealed their friendship. But Fernande said that Picasso had been so impressed by Gertrude’s massive head and body he wanted to paint her even before he knew her.
Like Cézanne’s Madame Cézanne with a Fan and Matisse’s Woman with a Hat, his Portrait of Gertrude Stein represented the subject seated in a chair and looking down at the viewer. Picasso was jousting directly with his rivals. Gertrude was delighted by the outcome, writing some years later that “for me, it is I, and it is the only reproduction of me which is always I, for me.” When people told Picasso that Gertrude didn’t resemble her portrait, he would reply, “She will.”
It was probably the fall of 1906 when Picasso and Matisse met at the Steins. Gertrude said they exchanged paintings, each choosing the other’s weakest effort. They would see each other at the Saturday evening salons initiated by Gertrude and Leo on the rue de Fleurus and the Michael Steins on the rue Madame. These organized viewings came about because Gertrude, who used the studio for her writing, resented unscheduled interruptions. In Gertrude’s flat, the pictures were tiered three or four high, above heavy wooden Renaissance-era furniture from Florence. The illumination was gaslight; electric lighting didn’t replace it until a year or so before the outbreak of World War I. Still, the curious flocked to the Steins. Picasso called them “virginal,” explaining: “They are not men, they are not women, they are Americans.” He took many of his artist friends there, including Braque and Derain, and the poet Apollinaire. By 1908, Sarah reported, the crowds were so pressing that it was impossible to hold a conversation without being overheard.
In 1907 Leo and Gertrude acquired Matisse’s Blue Nude: Memory of Biskra, which depicts a reclining woman with her left arm crooked above her head, in a garden setting of bold crosshatchings. The picture, and other Matisses the Steins picked up, hit a competitive nerve in Picasso; in his aggressive Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (an artistic breakthrough, which went unsold for some years) and the related Nude with Drapery, he mimicked the woman’s gesture in Blue Nude, and he extended the crosshatchings, which Matisse had confined to the background, to cover the figures. The masklike face of Gertrude in Picasso’s earlier portrait proved to be a transition to the faces in these pictures, which derived from bold, geometric African masks. According to Matisse, Picasso became smitten with African sculpture after Matisse, on his way to the Steins, picked up a small African head in an antiques shop and, upon arriving, showed it to Picasso, who was “astonished” by it.
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Comments (9)
For me, Gertrude Stein will forever stand in disgrace, pariah who was protected during WWII while French Jews and others were persecuted and exterminated by the Nazis. Her vile protector, Bernard Fay, a well documented virulent anti-Semite, Nazi collaborator and Vichy toady who was responsible for countless deaths, even managed to elude justice, thanks in part to Gertrude's defense of him.
Posted by Richard Braun on May 24,2012 | 02:10 PM
Gertrude Stein was a genius? A marketing, and financial genius, maybe, but certainly not in her understanding of art. Stein readily admitted she yearned to become rich and famous, and became the early 20th century equivalent to our Kim Kardashian. Except, while Kardashian's shtick is her superficial physical appearance, and her ability to access our 21st century television medium, in the early 20th century there was no television, so Stein needed a different shtick.
Stein was wealthy enough, from a trust fund left for her from her father and brother Michael, that she did not need to work, but she desired to be very rich. So, because she couldn't afford established artists and because she wanted to purchase many pictures, she purchased pictures that no one else wanted: Picasso – Cezanne – Matisse – Gauguin, and which have no intrinsic value. Then she propagandized the concept that the pictures had a value for what they were supposed to “represent,” and that the artists who created them were geniuses, then she hyper-inflated the supposed value of them; created a speculative market for art, and convinced her friends that they should also invest in the concept, and created, basically, a pyramid scheme, built upon the implied value of art.
All of this was occurring along with the advent of the Industrial Revolution, and a huge wave of nouveau riche, who also yearned to prove their societal superiority: to the old world aristocracy who had purchased realistic art and the common man masses who now had access to realistic movies and photography. So, this early 20th century nouveau riche believed they could prove their superiority by buying something that was “different” than what the rest of the world had access to, and bought childishly simplistic pictures; pictures that any child can produce, and also other ridiculously asinine concepts such as Duchamp's readymades, and, in so doing, proved that they allowed themselves to become the victims of a con.
Posted by MrMikeludo on January 28,2012 | 01:19 AM
If you enjoyed this article, you must watch Woody Allen's "Midnight in Paris." This article will come to life for you.
Posted by Cleve Gray on January 17,2012 | 03:21 PM
Arthur Lubow’s excellent article [“An Eye for Genius”] makes no mention of Gertrude Stein’s earlier passion for science and medicine. While an undergraduate at the Harvard Annex she became interested in psychology and mentored by William James published two papers in the Psychological Review, her first appearance in print. In 1897 Stein began the study of medicine at Johns Hopkins University where she initially flourished, engaging in research that was quoted in the first major American neuroanatomical treatise(1899); her first book appearance. She completed the four year course but did not graduate because of poor grades in her final year, declaring herself “bored, frankly openly bored.” Gertrude Stein sailed for Europe in 1903, the beginning of her expatriate life devoted to art and literature.
Posted by Richard L. Golden on January 12,2012 | 12:34 AM
Gertrude Stein famously claimed that Hitler should get a Peace Nobel Prize in 1934.Sorry folks but we are talking about a moron.
Posted by Adam on January 11,2012 | 09:03 PM
If you're a Gertrude Stein fan, come over to Gertie’s fan page at www.facebook.com/quotinggertrudestein! There is always a there there. Gertrude is Gertrude is Gertrude.
Posted by Rentate Stendhal on January 7,2012 | 06:44 PM
Great article, and I look forward to the exhibit in New York. I'm an art historian. I've often felt that although the Steins receive credit for the gatherings and networking, the Stein's collection did not receive the credit it deserved for the influence it had.
Posted by Sara on January 6,2012 | 11:06 PM
Art is always art. It just often takes audiences awhile to catch up with it. So it was then; so it is today.
Posted by Gene in L.A. on December 29,2011 | 12:59 PM
What a wonderful flashback to when Art was Art..
Posted by Larry Martin on December 27,2011 | 02:01 AM