Henri Matisse
1869 - 1954
Henriette lisant
31.5 x 34.4 cm (12 ³/₈ x 13 ¹/₂ inches)
Signed lower left, Henri Matisse
Executed circa 1923
Parke-Bernet Galleries, Inc., New York, 1961
Paul Kantor Gallery, Beverly Hills
E. V. Thaw & Co. (The New Gallery), New York
Christie, Manson & Woods, Ltd., London, 1964
Kramer collection, acquired from the above sale
Madame A. G. Cohen, London
Christie, Manson & Woods, Ltd., London, 1966
Private collection, acquired from the above sale
Private collection, by descent
Sotheby's London, 1995
Ann and Gordon Getty, San Francisco, acquired from the above sale
Christie's New York, 2022
Private collection, acquired from the above
The subject of this work on paper is Henriette Darricarrère, one of Henri Matisse’s most significant models. Henriette was a 19-year-old ballerina and musician when Matisse discovered her working as a film extra at the Victorine Studios in Nice in 1920. Impressed by her poise and artistic background, Matisse invited her to model – a role in which she quickly became “part of the family” (his wife Amélie grew fond of her). He even gave Henriette painting lessons during their time together, effectively mentoring her as an artist while she posed for him.
Henriette Darricarrère is perhaps best known as the face and figure of Matisse’s celebrated “Odalisque” paintings of the 1920s, however, Matisse also depicted his muse in numerous more natural and intimate poses. In Henriette lisant, she is shown absorbed in a book, without any elaborate costume or background. Works like this highlight Henriette’s “quiet side” and Matisse’s sensitivity in portraying it.
Matisse himself noted that drawing allowed him "to consider simultaneously the character of the model, the human expression, the quality of surrounding light, atmosphere and all that can only be expressed by drawing" (artist quoted in J. Elderfield, The Drawings of Henri Matisse, London, 1984, p. 84).
This original painting by Henri Matisse is available for sale.
Henri Matisse
biography
Matisse’s mastery of colour was first demonstrated by his role in the emergence of the Fauvist movement. After his first solo exhibition at Ambroise Vollard’s Gallery in 1904, he spent the summers of 1904 and 1905 in the South of France, along with artists such as Signac, Henri Edmond Cross, André Derain and Maurice de Vlaminck, producing paintings inspired by the glaring sun of Saint Tropez with bright, contrasting colours. In 1905, Matisse exhibited with these artists at the Salon d’Automne. They used loud, unmodulated colours to create expressive and decorative works of art. A review by the critic Louis Vauxcelles, in which he mentioned a “Donatello chez les fauves” (Donatello among the wild beasts) - referring to a Donatello sculpture that shared a room with these artists - led to them becoming known as the Fauves. The movement was met with unease, as demonstrated by the critic Camille Mauclair, who wrote; “A pot of paint has been flung in the face of the public.” Despite this period of notoriety in France, Matisse was admired abroad and revolutionised the use of colour, as his student, the Swedish painter Henrik Sorensen, recalled, “He gave us the sense of colour as a means of creating depth, distance and motion in the picture.”
Unphased by the hostile reception of fauvism in France, Matisse went on to create some of his finest work in the period that followed the decline of Fauvism in 1906, and after his move to Nice in 1917. These works are recognisable in their flattened forms and decorative patterns. In 1917, Matisse relocated to Cimiez, a suburb of Nice. His work in this so-called “Nice period,” featured a softer approach and a return to traditional forms of figuration. He often depicted airy, sunlit interiors, fulfilling his ambition to create “an art of balance, or purity and serenity, devoid of troubling or depressing subject matter.” One of his repeated subjects of this period was the odalisque, often set in an elaborate, orientalist interior. While greatly valued today, these paintings were dismissed as superficial and decorative.
After an intestinal operation in 1941, Matisse had to use a wheelchair, nevertheless, he had an enduring determination to create art. This final decade of Matisse’s life was a period of radical reinvention and vitality. He abandoned painting altogether and began “drawing with scissors,” by cutting out shapes from painted paper and creating paper collages, called gouaches découpés. To create these cut-paper compositions, Matisse was helped by studio assistants, who painted sheets of paper with brightly-coloured gouache, before Matisse cut foliage, fruit, acrobats, dancers and swimmers out of them. One of these assistants recalled that Matisse “knew what he was looking for, but we didn’t.” By cutting directly into colour, Matisse found the harmony between colour and line that he had always hoped to achieve. In these cut-outs, he simplified forms to their absolute essence. His Blue Nudes series demonstrates his ability to use colour and geometry to create complete simplicity. Matisse’s contemporaries dismissed these cut-outs as paper jokes, but Matisse insisted that however incomprehensible to his contemporary audience, his work would speak to the future.
As he predicted, Matisse’s work has indeed been hugely influential for later generations of artists. Matisse’s reform of colour paved the way for American Abstract Expressionism during the 1940s and 1950s. Alongside figures such as Picasso and Marcel Duchamp, Matisse is widely regarded as one of the artists who revolutionised art in the opening decades of the 20th century. Due to his personal association with art collectors during his lifetime, including the Russian art collector Sergei Shchukin, American collectors Gertrude, Leo and Michael Stein and their friends, Clarabel and Etta Cone, many of Matisse’s works are housed in these collections, such as the Shchukin and Morozov collections in St Petersburg and Moscow respectively, and the Cone collection at the Baltimore Museum of Art. Matisse’s work is also found in the world’s leading galleries, including the MoMA and the Guggenheim in New York, the Tate Modern in London and the Centre Pompidou in Paris.
Henri Matisse
biography
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