The Prague Post - Matisse's last years cut out -- but not pasted -- at Paris expo

EUR -
AED 4.269205
AFN 73.236671
ALL 95.352378
AMD 427.641212
ANG 2.081374
AOA 1067.15645
ARS 1624.29075
AUD 1.626528
AWG 2.095079
AZN 1.978238
BAM 1.96037
BBD 2.34206
BDT 142.913152
BGN 1.941248
BHD 0.438575
BIF 3461.865182
BMD 1.16248
BND 1.488971
BOB 8.03473
BRL 5.827752
BSD 1.162811
BTN 112.531327
BWP 15.769762
BYN 3.190437
BYR 22784.606301
BZD 2.338652
CAD 1.598358
CDF 2619.634852
CHF 0.915201
CLF 0.026531
CLP 1044.174606
CNY 7.906611
CNH 7.906386
COP 4332.097645
CRC 525.525077
CUC 1.16248
CUP 30.805718
CVE 110.725989
CZK 24.302682
DJF 206.596142
DKK 7.472851
DOP 68.472302
DZD 154.5263
EGP 62.097237
ERN 17.437199
ETB 183.381294
FJD 2.56002
FKP 0.867574
GBP 0.86546
GEL 3.109608
GGP 0.867574
GHS 13.426958
GIP 0.867574
GMD 84.283726
GNF 10206.573972
GTQ 8.864665
GYD 243.176881
HKD 9.10424
HNL 30.956458
HRK 7.535312
HTG 152.214835
HUF 359.825312
IDR 20609.373887
ILS 3.374557
IMP 0.867574
INR 112.212501
IQD 1522.848686
IRR 1535577.841127
ISK 143.403259
JEP 0.867574
JMD 183.968859
JOD 0.824193
JPY 184.720964
KES 150.494396
KGS 101.659315
KHR 4661.544
KMF 494.0539
KPW 1046.198886
KRW 1743.458329
KWD 0.359485
KYD 0.969059
KZT 548.648982
LAK 25522.246872
LBP 104100.075949
LKR 400.593844
LRD 213.02446
LSL 19.122879
LTL 3.432501
LVL 0.703172
LYD 7.387575
MAD 10.718544
MDL 20.210113
MGA 4864.978274
MKD 61.637912
MMK 2440.351379
MNT 4161.345258
MOP 9.382071
MRU 46.481727
MUR 55.113081
MVR 17.913476
MWK 2019.227052
MXN 20.137581
MYR 4.603532
MZN 74.286399
NAD 19.268085
NGN 1594.050753
NIO 42.680511
NOK 10.760699
NPR 180.049723
NZD 1.98258
OMR 0.446981
PAB 1.162811
PEN 3.966964
PGK 5.064518
PHP 70.833397
PKR 323.870125
PLN 4.245951
PYG 7164.701984
QAR 4.238419
RON 5.238248
RSD 117.441882
RUB 82.782221
RWF 1699.545633
SAR 4.362155
SBD 9.322428
SCR 16.046758
SDG 698.114806
SEK 10.860881
SGD 1.486039
SHP 0.867909
SLE 28.62612
SLL 24376.624989
SOS 664.34154
SRD 43.133765
STD 24060.987168
STN 24.818946
SVC 10.174719
SYP 128.505755
SZL 19.122779
THB 37.858487
TJS 10.802582
TMT 4.080304
TND 3.362476
TOP 2.798972
TRY 53.004669
TTD 7.882375
TWD 36.741224
TZS 3034.081833
UAH 51.481712
UGX 4389.231952
USD 1.16248
UYU 46.879283
UZS 14060.194848
VES 604.795229
VND 30658.082754
VUV 137.487219
WST 3.157138
XAF 657.489706
XAG 0.0154
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.14166
XCG 2.095685
XDR 0.816239
XOF 656.221124
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.396778
ZAR 19.158541
ZMK 10463.71141
ZMW 22.0063
ZWL 374.318058
  • RBGPF

    0.7200

    63.23

    +1.14%

  • BCC

    1.8100

    67.28

    +2.69%

  • CMSD

    0.1400

    22.89

    +0.61%

  • JRI

    0.2000

    12.67

    +1.58%

  • BCE

    0.1900

    24.17

    +0.79%

  • GSK

    -0.2700

    50.78

    -0.53%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    22.78

    -0.09%

  • RIO

    2.3900

    103.31

    +2.31%

  • NGG

    0.5700

    84.72

    +0.67%

  • AZN

    2.8200

    187.46

    +1.5%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    33.6

    +0.06%

  • RYCEF

    0.8800

    16.25

    +5.42%

  • BTI

    -0.7600

    65.3

    -1.16%

  • BP

    -1.0100

    45.13

    -2.24%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    15.24

    +0.59%

Matisse's last years cut out -- but not pasted -- at Paris expo
Matisse's last years cut out -- but not pasted -- at Paris expo / Photo: Anne-Christine POUJOULAT - AFP

Matisse's last years cut out -- but not pasted -- at Paris expo

The final years of Henri Matisse's artistic life, marked by the Nazi occupation of France and a brush with death and surgery, will light up a twilight retrospective opening next week.

Text size:

From Tuesday, the Grand Palais in Paris will see a reunion of seminal series by the late French master, such as "Blue Nudes", "Jazz" or the monumental "La Gerbe" (The Sheaf), revealing the ageing painter's prolific work ethic despite his health woes.

The exhibition brings together 320 works, from media as varied as paintings, sketches, gouache cut-outs, textiles and stained glass, all drafted by the artist in the run-up to his death in 1954 at the age of 84.

Titled "Matisse 1941-1954", it chronicles a time when the Nazis considered Matisse a "degenerate" artist, during which he confessed to a friend that he came within a "whisker of death" after going under the surgeon's knife in 1941.

"At that time, he was therefore an elderly man, partially disabled and struggling to stand upright," said Claudine Grammont, the curator of the exhibition and a former director of the Matisse Museum in Nice.

Yet despite those woes, Matisse was about to embark on "the most prolific moment of his career", Grammont added.

"It's truly his apotheosis, meaning that the artist reaches a state of nonchalance, of detachment... in short, a moment of grace."

Grammont, who also heads the graphic art department at the French capital's famed Pompidou museum, bristles at the long-standing accusation that Matisse abandoned the art of painting for cut-outs in his old age.

"It has often been said, wrongly, that during this period Matisse stopped painting and did nothing but cut-out gouaches.

"Well, no: Matisse painted 75 paintings between 1941 and 1954."

Nonetheless, Matisse's supposed dotage was marked by an outbreak of inspiration.

"In 1950 alone, 40 works were produced. That's a lot for an 80-year-old man," Grammont said.

- 'Intimacy' -

Visitors will have until July 26 to catch the late Matisse's essential works, including the best part of his ornamentation for the Vence Chapel in southeastern France and its dozen paintings.

It also brings together four of his now-ubiquitous "Blue Nudes", which have become a modern cultural touchstone, visible on tourist-shop T-shirts and the walls of student bedsits alike, even despite criticism of the artist's supposed colonialism from his time in Tahiti.

Matisse would often work on pieces such as 1953's "La Gerbe", with its splash of vividly coloured spiky cut-outs, at night, "because he was an insomniac", Grammont said.

For the curator, Matisse significantly altered his method in his final years, developing "a new iconographic vocabulary" through the cut-out to give his art a monumental scope.

Hence an exhibition on two floors, with spacious rooms capable of housing these large gouache cut-outs once pinned to the walls of his studio.

"What we wanted to recreate in the exhibition is this intimacy within the atelier," Grammont said.

"It's about being able to enter Matisse's studio and find yourself face to face with the artworks."

E.Cerny--TPP