Modigliani: Misunderstood
A new exhibition positions the bohemian artist's work above even his operatic life story
- By Doug Stewart
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
In Paris, he discovered the work of Renoir, Degas, Gauguin and, among the younger, more radical set, Matisse and Picasso. Cézanne in particular he pronounced “admirrrable,” one of his favorite adjectives; whenever Cézanne’s name was mentioned, he’d pull a reproduction of the painter’s Boy in a Red Vest from his pocket and kiss it. His own early works were somber, Expressionist-influenced portraits with roughly applied gray green colors and heavy outlining that borrowed all too obviously from Cézanne and Toulouse-Lautrec.
Modigliani quickly assumed the pose of the flamboyant bohemian: he frequented the artist hangouts of Montmartre and later Montparnasse, wore a bright silk scarf knotted around his neck in place of a cravat or tie and answered to the nickname Modi, a pun on peintre maudit (accursed painter). Russian artist Chaim Soutine was a close friend, and Maurice Utrillo, later famous for his painted scenes of Montmartre, was a favorite drinking companion. Modigliani was also friendly with Picasso, though not part of his inner circle. Picasso, who affected a workingman’s look with his patched clothes and fisherman’s sweaters, seems to have admired Modigliani’s wardrobe more than his paintings; needing canvas, he once painted over a Modigliani work he had acquired. Modigliani, for his part, recognized the Spaniard’s genius but told a friend that artistic talent was no excuse for not dressing decently.
For much of his life, Modigliani was better known as a character than as a painter. Some 40 years after his death, his daughter, Jeanne Modigliani, wrote that some people nearly swooned at his suave, cultivated manner, while others found him “an unbearable buffoon” and a “boring, drunken spoilsport.” (Jeanne, a toddler when her parents died, was raised by her father’s sister in Italy. She knew her father only from interviews, letters and other documents. An artist and writer, she died in 1984 at age 66.)
Modigliani’s first patron was Paul Alexandre, a young surgeon and would-be dealer who ran a low-budget art colony of sorts in a run-down house on Paris’ Rue du Delta. Modigliani painted there rent-free and turned over his canvases to Alexandre for 10 to 20 francs each ($2 to $4), and his sketches for perhaps 20 centimes (4 cents). It wasn’t much, but the doctor let the artist retrieve his work if he could get a better offer. Between 1909 and 1913, Modigliani painted three oil portraits of Alexandre. The first was a conventional portrait with the subject posing stagily, with hand on hip. The last (far left), which the artist painted from memory, is the most distinctively “Modiglianiesque,” with the rapid brushwork, elongated face and blank eyes that would become his trademark.
Modigliani had entered seven watercolors and oils in Paris’ Salon d’Automne exhibition in 1907 and five works in the Salon des Indépendants in 1908, but they’d attracted little attention. Other than Alexandre, no one seemed interested in his art. Embittered, he threw himself instead into carving stone, inspired in part by Romanian sculptor Constantin Brancusi, a friend and neighbor. Modigliani was convinced Rodin and his followers had corrupted sculpture with an overreliance on clay—“too much mud,” he called it. Real sculptors, he declared, carved directly from stone. To do so himself, he stole chunks of limestone from building sites. For an occasional sculpture in wood, he swiped oak crossties from the new Metro line then being extended to Montmartre.
From about 1909 to 1914, though the stone dust weakened his frail lungs, Modigliani carved a series of large, highly stylized stone heads. With their impossibly long noses and tiny pursed mouths, the massive works combined the serenity of early Renaissance tomb sculpture with the exotic spookiness of Easter Island monoliths. He also drew and painted caryatids—load-bearing architectural figures—almost obsessively.
“The influence of tribal art, especially African sculpture, on the avant-garde in Paris during this period cannot be overestimated,” says Mason Klein, associate curator at the Jewish Museum, who believes that Modigliani’s acute awareness of himself as a Jew (if a nonpracticing one) and an outsider opened him to the richness of non-Western art. “If you look at his sculpture,” says Klein, “you see the influence of not only African art but Khmer art and the art of archaic Greece, ancient Egypt and Rome. You even see some of the iconic presence of Byzantine art.”
Unfortunately, Modigliani’s carved heads were simply too strange to attract buyers. He used them as giant candleholders in the disheveled studio where he often slept and worked. One limestone block that he had transformed into a kneeling caryatid (p. 78) was too heavy for him to cart away from the vacant lot where he found and carved it. Friends rescued it shortly after his death in 1920. It is now in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.
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Comments (5)
Recently I saw the movie starring Andie Garcia I had seen it before & enjoyed it. So was eager to see it again on foxtel cable tv in Australia. I become curious to know more about this artist & his work. Upon seeing his collection I was entranced by his amazing interpretation of what he saw & how he portrayed it on canvas. His paintings mesmerized me & found myself looking closer & closer at his work. He was an artist that was born before his time & his paintings would be appreciated in this century. The long strokes & odd faces cannot be seen other than brilliant. A showing of his complete works would be inspiring. Thank you.
Posted by Diane on February 13,2013 | 03:24 AM
It was sad sorry
Posted by Gia khan on August 29,2012 | 07:33 AM
Hello,
There is a painting I saw about 20 years ago. It is of a painter who is wearing a black cape and holding a palette with his brush painting himself that very image. In the painting that image is repeated until replication is too tiny to paint. The easiest way to explain it is, when mirrors are reflected into each other the successive image is repeated, until the edges of the mirror are reached. The painting is like that, He is painting himself from a third party observation perspective and then repeating that image successively. I hope this is an adequate description. May I request assistance in finding the name and artist of this painting, please if anyone wants to help?
Thank you.
Posted by jessie Querl on April 17,2012 | 03:45 PM
I remember being stopped in a hallway of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC by Modigliani's painting of a cleaning woman sitting in a chair in a non-descript room. I sat against a wall just looking forgetting time and place. The picture began to include life outside its frame. I coiuld almost hear, smell, and see the Paris street outside. an amazing genius! Why so few comments about what a wonderful colorist he was?
Posted by raymond biasotti on October 6,2010 | 07:16 PM
Thanks for an in dept article about Modigliani. Making people sensitive to art should be pursued more in education than religion. Thanks
Posted by Tony Vanderlinden on February 21,2009 | 10:22 PM