BEAUTIFUL MUSIC - Chapter 1

I wasn’t too sure how I would react to the Chagall exhibition as I have seen so much of his work. Would it be a repeat of what I know? Up until now I had not visited The Philharmonie de Paris exhibition centre. Laurent and I were off to see Marc Chagall: "The Triumph of Music"  which explores the artist’s creations for the stage, the décors and architectural works he was commissioned to produce, all somehow tied to music.

There was a marvelous video on the ceiling and music on off playing for each one of the works shown in the monumental painting. It really  is a stunning tribute to the composers who have marked the history of music. This is not quite the one, but certainly worthwhile watching - in any language..


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z5JnZ6twObc

Maquette for the wall painting in the Metropolitan Opera - New York - 1966

As above

Final design for Garnier, Paris 1963

Final design for Garnier, Paris 1963
The show brings together some three hundred artworks (paintings, drawings, costumes, sculptures and ceramics), with multimedia installations featuring the ceiling of the Paris Opera thanks to extraordinary technology developed by Google Lab, and photographs (for the most part previously unpublished), including those of Marc Chagall’s studio taken by Izis in the 1960s.

The exhibition starts at the end of his life and finishes with the panels Chagall painted for the Jewish Theatre in Moscow in 1920, conserved at the Tretyakov Gallery, form a universal décor, encompassing the different arts (Music, Dance, Theatre and Literature)A “total” approach to art, while celebrating Yiddish culture and language through the amalgam of vernacular theatre, music, rhythm, sound and colour.

Self Portrait, 1907 (Beaubourg)


Self portrait in Green: 1914: Beaubourg

Painter at the Crucifixion, 1968 (P.C.)

Double Profile, 1964

Final design for the Synagogue, Jersualem : 1959-60

La Bete fantastique, 1952

The world in red and black, 1951

Adam and Eve with the Snake, 1965

David and Bethsabé, 1966

Profile d'arlequin au cheval vert, 1970

Cavalier soufflant dans une trompe, 1948

Le Clown au fond bleu, 1928

Later, when Chagall fled Europe for the United States, his discovery of the spaciousness and monumental scale of American architecture and landscapes inspired a new direction in his work for the stage. He created the scenery and costumes for the ballets Aleko in Mexico in 1942 and The Firebird in New York in 1945, renewing  his connection to Russian music.

Costume for Aleko, 1942

       Costume for Aleko, 1942
Chagall eventually returned to France, where the Paris Opera commissioned similar work for Daphnis et Chloé in 1958 (1959 for the Paris Opera premiere). His collaboration with the Paris Opera culminated in 1962 when the presiding Minister of Cultural Affairs André Malraux commissioned Chagall to paint the ceiling of the Palais Garnier Opera House.

Avant le Chevalet de ma vie,1922

The Coque, 1947 (Beaubourg)

The dancer, 1934-35 (Beaubourg)

Couple with red goat, 1970


Clown playing a violin, 1941-42
Theme on La Flute enchantée, 1966-67
Design for "Daphné et Chloé" curtain: act11, 1958
"Papageno" - a Flûte enchanté", 1967
Design for Daphné et Chloé - the Pan, 1958

Design for "L'oiseau de fer" Curtian - 1945
 But how could I forget La Fonataine's Fables? And all from private collections. Lucky people!

The Cock and the Fox, 1926

The Miller, his son and the donkey, 1926

The Cat and the Two Birds, 1925-26

The two Pigeons, 1926

There were just too many people there and we were more than taken back by the crowds. I will certainly go back and see the exhibition again but before a concert. I virtually knew none of his work for the theatre. It was a complete surprise and so rich - that’s why my second visit (providing there are less people) will be so interesting…..Oh, forgot to say that no photographs allowed, so I ordered the catalogue over Internet this morning. The Beaux Arts magazine was fascinating but lacking in information and that pushed me toward the catalogue.The choice of photographs was very difficult. They are not necessarily in function of the text either - but one point: l would think that 80% of these paintings or works came from private collections - so we wont necessarily see them elsewhere. I tried not to choose the museum collections and have mentioned if they came from those.

Another point that should add, the exhibition is in two parts. Paris and « La Piscine » in Roubaix. Yes, you have guessed. I am off to see it next week and that will be the next chapter!

Commentaires

Lo a dit…
Spot on Mrs K! I wish I had seen the second part in Roubaix but it wasn't to be...

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