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 8 of 9)
Though Picasso stayed in Paris and Matisse remained in the south during World War II, their respect and friendship deepened. Picasso looked after Matisse’s paintings, stored in a bank vault. Matisse, in ill health, defended Picasso against his critics. “This poor man,” Matisse wrote to his son Pierre, “is paying a hard price for his uniqueness. He is living in Paris quietly, has no wish to sell, asks for nothing.”
Yet both men were far too prickly to keep their peace. At the war’s end in 1945, a major show of their work was held at the Victoria and AlbertMuseum in London. As he prepared for this exhibition, Matisse wrote in a notebook: “Tomorrow, Sunday, at 4 o’clock, visit from Picasso. As I’m expecting to see him tomorrow, my mind is at work. I’m doing this propaganda show in London with him. I can imagine the room with my pictures on one side, and his on the other. It’s as if I were going to cohabit with an epileptic.”
As Matisse’s health sank in his 80s, his art soared. His long struggle to purify form, to make figures beautiful by making them simpler, to show essence and erase detail, led him back to the child’s art of paper cutouts. Some of these were huge, others small enough for him to manage from bed. When a Dominican priest invited him in 1947 to design a chapel in the town of Vence, he prepared some of the images for the stained-glass windows and wall decorations by cutting out paper. Picasso, too, took up a pair of shears. He made a series of sculptures that look like paper cutouts, though they are of sheet metal. And his paintings seemed to take on a Matissean simplicity of form, even a decorative exuberance.
In retrospect, one should have seen this coming. Some of their earlier paintings, like Matisse’s portrait of Marguerite, had a paper cutout look. And Picasso’s collaborations with Braque involved cutting and pasting paper in Cubist collages. There were even earlier hints. Matisse always drew on the weaving traditions of his birthplace, using textile patterns to subvert perspective and, as Hilary Spurling notes, “he resorted as a painter to old weavers’ tricks like pinning a paper pattern to a half-finished canvas.” Picasso had learned the same trick from his father, who used cut-out paper to construct his own paintings. “It’s an old, formal means for academic painters to build a painting,” explains PompidouCenter curator Isabelle Monod-Fontaine. “Cut-and-pasted paper was a way for a painter to conceptualize his work. Picasso and then Matisse took this from a low level, a hidden technique, and put it out front, on the surface, in the art itself. And that is a major part of modern art.”
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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