Matisse in the 1930s

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'Important. . . . A substantial publication that contributes a great deal to our knowledge of the artist' - H-France Review

The first in-depth examination of Matisse's work in the 1930s, a key decade of creative innovation and renewal for this celebrated artist

In 1930, as Henri Matisse (1869-1954) embarked on The Dance, a monumental mural commissioned by the American collector Albert C. Barnes, he began experimenting in ways that would permanently change the nature of his work. The use of pre-painted cut papers to lay out his compositions led to a new style of flat tones and bold shapes.

He also increasingly used serial imagery to make visible his creative process, aiming to capture the flux of his own perceptions and emotions in the work of art. This volume highlights and explains pivotal transformations in Matisse's work in the 1930s across a range of media, including mural and easel painting, sculpture, printmaking, drawing, and the illustrated book. The transatlantic contributors also look at the relationship between Matisse and the Parisian art journal Cahiers d'art, which played an outsized role in publicizing Matisse's work during this period, and consider his exhibitions, his ongoing involvement with decorative painting, his studio as a creative laboratory, and the role of his model and muse Lydia Delectorskaya in his studio practice.

Details
  • Author: Matthew Affron, the Muriel and Philip Berman Curator of Modern Art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art and Claudine Grammont, director of the Musée Matisse in Nice
  • Hardcover: 256 pages | 216 colour illustrations
  • ISBN: 9780876332993
  • Publication date: September 2022
  • Dimensions: 32.3 x 24.7 cm

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