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 6 of 9)
And Picasso’s painting held a joke for Matisse as well. A short time before the exchange, Baldassari explains, Matisse had been attacked in the press for a still life of his own. “Lemons are not flat, Monsieur Matisse,” a critic had written. Picasso’s lemon was even flatter than Matisse’s. Moreover, Picasso’s still life, made at the same time as the Demoiselles, is a clear leap into Cubism. “It’s a very important exchange,” says Baldassari, “a beautiful exchange. It’s like an emblem, showing each other that they understand each other’s program. It’s like the first key to understanding them.” It’s as if they were saying to each other: “Here’s how to be modern.”
Neither was convinced. When Picasso’s friend Braque sent a group of his own new paintings to the Salon d’Automne in 1908, Matisse was one of the jurors. “They’re made of little cubes!” he protested as he voted to reject them. A critic heard this and baptized “Cubism” in the press. At the same time, though, Matisse took his most important collector,a Russian textile czar named Shchukin, to see the Demoiselles in Picasso’s studio. Shchukin, whose Moscow home already boasted walls of Monets, Renoirs, van Goghs, Gauguins and Cézannes along with his Matisses, was at first shocked, but soon began buying Picassos too. It was an act of great generosity on Matisse’s part.
Picasso plunged into Cubism with both feet, collaborating in the beginning with Braque. Matisse’s response can best be seen in one of his most beautiful paintings, a portrait of Madame Matisse made in 1913, in which her face appears masklike (p. 65). Baldassari says that Picasso was sick that summer and Matisse visited him often. In Picasso’s studio, he saw a white African mask hanging near the portrait of Marguerite he had given Picasso. “When he painted the white mask for Madame Matisse’s face,” she continues, “Matisse was playing a sort of trick with Picasso. And right after this, he became involved in exploring Cubism in his own painting.” Of Madame Matisse’s portrait, the poet Guillaume Apollinaire said Matisse had reinvented voluptuousness in painting. Abstract as it is, with its masklike face and flattened sense of space, the serene portrait contrasts strikingly, despite certain similarities in format and subject, with Picasso’s Portrait of a Young Girl, done the following year. In this painting, Picasso’s Cubist approach undermines the serenity of the pose. But even in opposition, as in these two portraits, the dialogue between the two artists was clear.
Sometimes, however, it was more subtle. One painter might look far into the other’s past, taking up where he had long ago left off. There are many examples of such cross-pollination in the show, but one of the most striking is Picasso’s monumental The Three Dancers. It was done in 1925 when he was working on the sets for the great Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes. Matisse had done the sets and costumes for a Diaghilev ballet a few years before, which irked Picasso when he heard about it. “Matisse!” he snapped. “What is a Matisse? A balcony with a big red flowerpot falling all over it!”
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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