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 3 of 5)
“Sculpture helped him think about how you can simplify forms, how you can show the essence of something using the simplest possible means,” says art historian Tamar Garb. When Modigliani refocused on painting around 1914, his work had a new energy and confidence.
Most of the painters who made names for themselves in the early 20th century took part in new movements with their own theories and manifestoes: Fauvism, Futurism and the like. “Modigliani has been an anomaly,” says Klein. “His work doesn’t fit into the standard art-historical categories like Expressionism or Cubism. Not to paint any still lifes and to be so exclusively focused on portraiture was very unusual, if not unique, in his time.” But Modigliani was happy to stand apart. Charles Beadle, an English journalist who contributed to a 1941 biography of Modigliani titled Artist Quarter, had known the artist in Paris around 1913. “Once,” Beadle wrote, “when I asked him what he called his ‘manner,’ he retorted haughtily: ‘Modigliani! When an artist has need to stick on a label, he’s lost!’ ”
Impulsive and argumentative, Modigliani had neither the inclination nor the social skills needed for commissioned portraiture. (In an early portrayal of a fox-hunting French baroness, he changed the woman’s scarlet riding jacket to canary yellow. Insulted, the baroness refused to pay for the painting.) Many of his subjects were friends or acquaintances. His portrait of Jean Cocteau (p. 3) is a deft blend of the signature Modigliani “look”—mismatched eyes, crooked nose, elongated head balanced on a plinthlike neck—and the poet’s icy hauteur. “You see Cocteau sitting there imperious on his thronelike chair with one eyebrow lifted, ready to dismiss someone’s stupid remark,” says Klein. The painting has elements of caricature but exudes the gravitas of a royal portrait.
Equally revealing are Modigliani’s depictions of Paul Guillaume, his first serious art dealer. In a 1915 portrait, Guillaume looks sleek and confident, with a fussy little mustache and one gloved hand holding a cigarette. “Modigliani wrote ‘Novo Pilota’ below the figure,” says Klein. “He saw Guillaume as his ‘New Pilot,’ a savvy member of the avantgarde who was going to advance his career. But you also see his distrust for this cosmopolitan know-it-all in the way he emphasized the cocky tilt of the head, the fancy suit, the cigarette, almost as though Guillaume were a pimp selling Modigliani’s work.”
Of course it is Modigliani’s stylized interpretations of languid, melancholy women that are best-known today. But what makes many of his portraits linger in one’s memory is the unease clouding his subjects’ faces. “All are like hurt children, albeit some of these children have beards or gray hair,” wrote Russian novelist Ilya Ehrenburg, who had also known the artist in Paris. “I believe that the world seemed to Modigliani like an enormous kindergarten run by very unkind adults.” The vulnerable-looking child wringing her hands in Little Girl in Blue had, in fact, just been scolded. The artist had sent her out for a bottle of wine, and she’d returned with lemonade.
Perhaps the unease reflected, too, the burden of Modigliani’s own poverty. He was evicted from a series of rooms in Montmartre and Montparnasse and slept in one-franc-anight hotels, train-station waiting rooms and abandoned buildings. He managed, however, to maintain his elegance whatever his finances and attracted a number of lovers, though his relationships tended to be stormy and brief. Unlike his artist friends, he refused to work odd jobs, though his efforts to sell his own work often ended badly. Writing in 1925, painter Maurice de Vlaminck recalled Modigliani showing some drawings to a dealer who had tracked him down in his studio: when the dealer angled for a discount, “Modigliani, without a word, picked up the pile of papers and straightened them carefully, made a hole through the entire pile, threaded a string through the lot and went and hung them up in the lavatory.”
Aside from small sums that his mother occasionally mailed him from Livorno, Modigliani survived mainly on quick sketches of people in cafés that he traded for coins, a meal, or a drink. Vlaminck remembered Modigliani’s casual dignity as he worked the Café de la Rotonde: “With the gesture of a millionaire he would hold out the sheet of paper (on which he sometimes went so far as to sign his name) as he might have held out a banknote in payment to someone who had just bought him a glass of whisky.”
In 1916, Modigliani befriended a small-time art dealer named Leopold Zborowski, a Polish émigré and self-styled poet who managed to provide the artist with a small monthly allowance in return for a regular allotment of paintings. The arrangement boosted the painter’s spirits as well as his income. As part of the deal, Zborowski gave the artist a room, food, painting materials and studio space, along with coal to heat it. The coal proved essential in the chilly winter of 1917, when, with Zborowski’s encouragement, Modigliani painted a string of large nudes that are among the artist’s most indelible works.
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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