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 4 of 5)
“Modigliani is a deeply Italian painter, and he’s clearly interested in the language of the body, which is the language of Italian art,” says Griselda Pollock, an art historian at England’s University of Leeds who wrote about the nudes for the Jewish Museum’s exhibition catalog. “When you stand in front of some of Modigliani’s nudes, you are literally embarrassed being in the presence of such frank physicality. Yet even though he’s reputed to be this dashing man with lots of lovers, these were typically models hired for him by Zborowski. He didn’t know them.”
Zborowski sold one nude for an unprecedented 300 francs ($60), but in general they proved problematic. Francis Carco, a writer friend of Modigliani’s, acquired one for his bachelor apartment. “The next morning,” he recalled, “when my concierge came to do the room, she nearly dropped dead on seeing the picture over the bed.” For Modigliani’s first and only one-man show, at Paris’ Berthe Weill gallery in December 1917, a large nude was placed in the shop’s front window, across the street from a police station. Noticing a crowd gathering on opening night, the police investigated and ordered all the nudes removed. When Weill demanded an explanation, the inspector fumed, “Ces nues . . . ils ont des p-p-poils!” (“These nudes . . . they have b-b-body hair!”) The planned month-long show was shut down before it had officially begun, although Weill did manage to sell two drawings. (Forty years later, Modigliani’s women were still raising blood pressure. Postal authorities in New York City deemed a GuggenheimMuseum postcard of one of his reclining nudes unfit for the U.S. mails in the 1950s.)
When Modigliani met his last and most devoted lover, Jeanne Hébuterne, in 1917, she was a promising art student of 19. She promptly moved in with him, leaving her petit-bourgeois family aghast that she had taken up with a failed artist, and a Jewish one at that. The couple shared a ramshackle apartment on Rue de la Grande Chaumière where, according to a later tenant, “one could see the sunlight shining through part of the wall.”
Hébuterne was slender with almond-shaped eyes, a pale complexion and long light-brown braids. She was so reserved that Zborowski’s wife, Hanka, later could not recall ever having heard her voice. Modigliani introduced her as his “best beloved”—an endearment he’d apparently never used with the other women in his life—and he pledged in writing to marry her (although he never followed through). Hébuterne’s love for Modigliani was apparently unconditional; she even condoned his drinking and barhopping.
In 1918, with Paris under German bombardment, Hébuterne pregnant, and Modigliani’s always fragile health worsening, Zborowski organized an artistic retreat in Provence, for himself, his family and a group of artists (including Modigliani and Hébuterne), that lasted nearly a year. There, Modigliani’s palette grew brighter and his compositions bolder. Hébuterne gave birth to their daughter, Jeanne, in Nice on November 29, 1918. By summer 1919, she was pregnant again. “I’m getting fat and becoming a respectable citizen of Cagnes-sur-Mer,” Modigliani told an artist friend that summer in mock-horror. “I’m going to have two kids; it’s unbelievable. It’s sickening!”
His art was finally getting noticed. That summer, Modigliani and Utrillo were the stars of a major art exhibition in London. The influential novelist and critic Arnold Bennett wrote in the exhibition’s catalog that Modigliani’s portraits “have a suspicious resemblance to masterpieces.”
On a page in his sketchbook at the start of 1920, Modigliani scrawled, “A new year. Here begins a new life.” Says curator Klein: “He wrote this in Paris three weeks before he died. He knew he was dying, but he worked right up to the end.” Modigliani probably caught pneumonia. Weak and emaciated, he collapsed at home and was taken unconscious to a charity hospital, where he died two days later.
His funeral was attended by a Who’s Who of the Paris art world: Picasso, Léger, Derain, Brancusi and hundreds more. In the funeral procession mourners reported being approached by dealers eager to buy Modigliani paintings. Galleries with his work in stock raised their prices tenfold; purchasers marked them up tenfold again. Forgeries flooded the market. Even police officials were eager for his paintings. Modigliani’s mother and siblings in Italy never benefited— they owned few, if any, of his paintings. Fourteen-month-old Jeanne’s only inheritance was a collection taken up on her behalf by her father’s fellow artists.
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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