UNMISTAKEABLE LONG NECKS

It was good to be getting back to the Tate Modern. Maybe this time with Pierrette it would seem more like a museum rather than a station with people rushing around getting lost - like I had. We were to see the Modigliani retrospective. 

An anecdote to start off with:-


It wasn’t the voluptuous curves of the naked woman, stretched out across the window of a small Paris gallery in 1917, which horrified the police commissioner who unfortunately lived directly opposite. It was the shocking fact that the artist had given her hair – and not just on her head, but pubic and underarm hair as well.

That exhibition was the only solo show in the lifetime of an artist whose life was short, poor, and scarred by illness and alcohol and probably drugs


I had read before coming  that the exhibition would bring together ten of the nudes. No photographs either so I resorted to a small catalogue. I did not photo all the nudes….


Reclining nude - 1919
Caryatid - 1913-14

Female Nude - 1916
Reclining Nude, Head Resting on Right Arm - 1919

The Sleeping Venus by Giorgione - 1510

Police closed down the 1917 exhibition in Paris for gross indecency, and it only reopened after the offending nude had been taken out of the window. The model for several of the paintings was his mistress, Jeanne Hébuterne, who had already shocked her family by training as an artist, and then aged 19 moved in with Modigliani, regarded by many as a degenerate philanderer addicted to hashish and opium. They planned to marry, but she was pregnant with their second child when he died penniless of tubercular meningitis. She killed herself two days later.`


Despite his poverty and lack of commercial success, dozens of artists attended his funeral in Paris. He knew many or probably most of the artists of that period. He painted Picasso – shown as a bit of a bruiser, with a shock of dark hair – the painter Juan Gris, and a playful portrait of his friend Jean Cocteau. Surprisingly for me, there was a portrait of the painter Diego Rivera, best known for his monumental murals in Mexico and his turbulent relationship with the artist Frida Kahlo, but who once shared a Paris studio with Modigliani.


Picasso - 1915
Juan Gris - 1915

Max Jacob -1916

Paul Guillaume - 1916
Jean Cocteau -1916



But who was this man? Handsome, that is for sure. Born in 1884 in Italy he knew that if he was to develop his career as an artist, there was only one place to go - Paris. He moved here when he was 21.Modigliani belonged to an educated family of Sephardic Jews who encouraged his ambition to become an artist. He was encouraged to read and learn languages. But it was Paris that offered him excitement and a variety of distractions which were a challenge and developed his work. 

Self Portrait -

Back to the beginning of the exhibition. We came into this painting.


Self Portrait - 1915

This is a self portrait painted around 1915 in which Modigliani presents himself as a the tragic clown Pierrot. The artists of that period could identify with Pierrot - linked to the past and yet open to the future. We could perhaps say that as Paris was a new place for him, Modigliani was ready to "invent" himself.



Red Bust -1913

Porttrait of Beatrice Hastings 1913-14
Caryatid - 1913

There were several years at the beginning of his life in Paris when he mostly worked on sculpture in various materials. Chalk, clay... and others which seemed to be sculptures, turned out to be paintings. 

Some paintings were not recognizably Modigliani. These for example 
The Cellist - 1909
Head of a Woman in profile - 1906-07


But of course those long necks could only be Modigliani
Black Hair -1918
Woman with velvet ribbon -1915

Beatrice Hastings - 1915
Portrait of Jeanne Hébuterne - his wife - 1918

Simone Martini & Lippo Memmi - we can see what influenced Modigliani is this painting - Virgin and vase of flowers - 1333

Marguerite -1916
Madame Pompadour  -1915





Jeanne Hébuterne - his wife - 1918
Jeanne Hébuterne - his wife - 1919

Commentaires

Michael Keane a dit…
Think I told you the story of when I was a very small boy, there was a Modigliani portrait hanging at the end of the hall next to the front door. I used to look at it and try to work out why the lady had such a thin face and long neck. My mother never gave me a satisfactory explanation.

Posts les plus consultés de ce blog

CONFLICTS AND ENCOUNTERS OF MULTIPLE HISTORIES

MY BELOVED PICASSO -I WAS LOOKING FORWARD TO THIS -

THE CHOICE OF ONE OF THE RICHEST WOMEN IN THE WORLD