Matisse & Picasso
As a new exhibition makes clear, these friendsand rivalsspurred each other to change the course of 20th-century art
- By Paul Trachtman
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2003, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 9)
Matisse wasted little time in painting an unflinching response—his 1908 Bathers with a Turtle. It’s a painting that truly set the two painters apart, even as they drew on the same sources. Cézanne was everywhere in Picasso’s painting, especially in its geometric fragmentations. But another aspect of Cézanne was evident in Matisse’s new work, an awkward, almost childlike drawing style. MoMAcurator and Matisse scholar John Elderfield says of the artists, “Picasso is taking Cézanne’s elements—the cone, cylinder and sphere—into Cubism. Matisse is taking Cézanne’s interest in the wholeness and the clarity of figures. They’re taking almost opposite interpretations of what they see in Cézanne: Picasso is understanding it as decomposition, and Matisse is understanding it as composition.”
Cézanne was not their only source of inspiration. Both Picasso and Matisse had viewed a collection of Gauguin woodcuts in 1906, and his South Seas primitivism showed up in woodcuts they both made soon after. As French curator Baldassari comments, both Matisse and Picasso were looking at anything that would help them break with the past. “Picasso was completely fascinated by photography,” she says. “And Matisse said he used photographs to get over his academic way of drawing. They used images from erotic cinema meant for voyeurs, not painters. The question of line, of composition, was secondary, although the distortion, the perversion of line, was very important to them. It was a game with form, with figuration. They defigured figuration! The question at the moment was how to leave the past. It was the question of ugliness . . . why not ugliness?”
In the autumn of 1907, Matisse and Picasso had agreed to swap paintings. As Gertrude Stein tells it, each painter selected what he considered the worst example of the other’s new work, as if to reassure themselves. Picasso picked a portrait of Matisse’s daughter Marguerite, and Matisse chose a still life, Pitcher, Bowl and Lemon. It was said that Picasso hung the Matisse in a room where his friends threw fake darts at it. You can find this story in the lavish, 400-page MoMAcatalog, but not all the show’s curators believe it.
“It’s wrong!” Baldassari insists. “The portrait was the most important painting for Picasso, and Matisse chose it for him because six years earlier Marguerite had had a serious throat operation. [In the portrait she wears a black band around her neck.] At the time of the operation, Matisse went to a Picasso show at Vollard’s gallery and saw a portrait [of Picasso’s friend Pere Mañach] that had the same flat structure, the same look, like a cutout. Matisse was shocked by it then, but his portrait of Marguerite was an exact mirror of it. The painting was a sort of joke, a tribute to Picasso.”
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Comments (4)
This shows how people with similarities and differences can express themselves individually and still have respect for one another. Humanity at its best.
Posted by on December 5,2012 | 02:14 AM
The idea that both Picasso and Matisse "could draw like Ingres" is simply mistaken. Even when they appeared to be trying to do so, as happened with some of the drawings Picasso did in the '20s, and in the lithographs Matisse did during the same decade, both were falling far short of the mark. If their earlier work was deliberately crude, it is this later work that make plain how limited each of them really was when it came to drawing from life, or emulating Ingres. The closest either was able to come was a kind of rude caricature of the real thing.
Posted by Craig Banholzer on March 18,2012 | 02:16 PM
For the connoisseur who has a point of reference memorized this article wuld be informative and amusing . For me who has a glancing memory of the works of the artists, this was a disappointment. I can't learn this way. Sorry.
Posted by Ann McDonald on January 29,2010 | 04:16 PM
I needed pictures for an Art Heritage class - no pictures with on-line articles?
Posted by Dorothy Espe on January 23,2008 | 08:11 AM