René Magritte: The Fifth Season
Regular price £27.95'a grand success on its own terms: a well chosen, carefully researched, beautifully designed reconsideration of an artist we thought we knew' - SF Chronicle
A richly illustrated book exploring Magritte's extraordinary late paintings
When René Magritte reached his 40s, something unexpected happened. The painter, who had honed an iconic Surrealist style between 1926 and 1938, suddenly started making paintings that looked almost nothing like his earlier work. First, he adopted an Impressionist aesthetic, borrowing the sweet, hazy palette of Pierre-Auguste Renoir—which he described as “sunlit Surrealism.” Then his style shifted again, incorporating popular imagery, the brash colours of Fauvism and the gestural brushwork of Expressionism. And then Magritte returned to his classic style as if nothing had happened.
René Magritte: The Fifth Season looks at the art Magritte made during and after the stylistic crises of the 1940s, revealing his shifting attitudes toward painting. Subjects explored in this volume include the artist’s Renoir period; the période vache, with its Fauvist- and Expressionist-style paintings that are little known to American audiences; the “hypertrophy of objects” paintings, a series that plays with the scale of familiar objects; and the enigmatic Dominion of Light suite, paintings that suggest the simultaneous experience of day and night.
Featuring full-colour plates of approximately 50 oil paintings, and a dozen of the artist’s gouaches, this handsome catalogue accompanying an exhibition at SFMoMA offers a new understanding of Magritte’s special position in the history of 20th-century art.
Details
- Author: Caitlin Haskell, Associate Curator of Painting and Sculpture at SFMoMA
- Hardcover: 156 pages | 105 illustrations
- Date published: May 2018
- Language: English
- ISBN: 978-1942884231
- Product Dimensions: 27.6 x 22.9 cm