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Picasso & Matisse
Andipa Gallery celebrates two prominent artists responsible for some of the greatest art of the early 20th Century. The works of Pablo Picasso (1881 - 1973) and Henri Matisse (1869 - 1954) are presented within Andipa Gallery's winter exhibition,
Picasso & Matisse, which runs from Friday 16 November through Saturday 8 December, 2007 at 162 Walton Street, Knightsbridge, SW3 2JL. The exhibition comprises over 40 original signed linocuts, etchings and lithographs, as well as a
selection
of
unique drawings. Prices range from o6,000 to o150,000.
Matisse, already established as one of the leaders of the Fauve movement, first met Picasso in his studio in 1906. Picasso, twelve years Matisse's junior, was
then
known as
much
for
his
fiery personality and tempestuous romances as for his innovative artistic style; a stark contrast to the refined, family-oriented Matisse. Despite their differences, the two men began what would become the
most
important
relationship of
their
artistic lives: from frequent studio visits and Saturday evenings in the company of the infamous Stein family in the rue de Fleurus, to the first of many joint exhibitions in the Galerie Paul
Guillaume in
Paris
in
1918.
Picasso
and
Matisse's exploration of line and form, as well as their shared obsession with the motif of the artist and the model, is visible throughout the show. The Andipa Gallery presents
several works from
Picasso's
Suite
Vollard which,
together
with
his
reflections on the artist's studio and the recurring themes of the Minotaur and the battle of love, is considered one of the most important graphic series in the
history of art, in
addition to later
works from
the 347 Series.
A
similar
mastery of
simplicity of line and form is apparent in such works by Matisse as Loulou Masque (1914 - 1915), Le Bonnet Fleurie (1929) and Nu Pour Cleveland
(1932).
Picasso's colour linocuts,
executed at
the height of his
prodigious
career in the
late
1950s and early 1960s, are considered the crowning achievement of his graphic work. The artist's innovative use of a singular
block in the
printing
of linocuts enabled him to
achieve brilliantly
and richly
coloured
works on
paper, evident in
such
works within the exhibition as Nature Morte a la Pastesque (1962). Realising only approximately 200 different
images in colour
linocut,
these works have become rare
icons of modern art.
Amongst a
selection of
linocuts
presented are Femme au
Chapeau
(1962), Avant la Pique, (1959) and Grand Nu de Femme (1962). These linocuts complement
several
original
works by
Picasso on display, including Tete
d'Homme (1959) and Le
Petit Bijoux
(1963), an
original pastel
and pencil drawing,
accompanied by
a certificate of authenticity from Maya Widmaier Picasso.
Matisse's fluidity of
line and bold
playfulness can be further viewed in
the delicate, yet
expressive, unique
drawing
entitled Femme Nue
(1927), previously found
within the private
collection of Madame Jean Matisse. Three years
following the execution of
this piece,
Matisse travelled to Tahiti in search of new
light, new
surroundings and
inspiration. He
sketched daily from his
French windows at the Hotel
Stuart, depicting the
framed glimpses of the sea
front boulevard and the two
slender masts that
swayed beneath the foliage of the towering
trees. This
spectacular view is
on display in the
unique piece Bateau a
l'Amarte (1930).
Picasso &
Matisse celebrates the
two most
significant artists of the
20th Century, whose
combined innovations revolutionized western art
in the 20th
Century and whose
presence continues to echo
throughout the art world
today.
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