Matisse: Father and Son
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Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #2004084 in Books
- Published on: 2001-06-01
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: 1.78 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 415 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Amazon.com
Author John Russell knew Pierre Matisse (1900-1989) personally, and after his death was invited to work in the legendary art dealer's archives. Among the treasure-trove of material was 34 years' worth of correspondence between Matisse and his father, the legendary French painter Henri Matisse (1869-1954). Russell's stately narrative draws on those letters, as well as Pierre's correspondence with the artists he represented (most notably Joan Miró, Balthus, Alberto Giacometti, and Jean Dubuffet). It reveals a remarkable intimacy between father and son, despite the fact that Pierre made his career in New York, while the elder Matisse resided in France. The naturally reserved Matisses were probably more candid in letters than they would have been in person about family crises; in addition, the correspondence provides fascinating insights into Henri's creative struggles and his shrewd business sense. Pierre is respectfully portrayed as a dealer of the old school--making a lifetime commitment to the artists he admired, regarding their works "not so much as objects of commerce, but as children ready for adoption." Russell, a former art critic for the New York Times, writes in a rather formal style that emphasizes the Matisses' links (and his own) to a vanished time, the heroic age of modern art and of the men and women who made it their mission to introduce it to the world. --Wendy Smith
From Publishers Weekly
When Henri Matisse's wife, Am?lie, permanently walked out on him in 1939 in a jealous rage over Lydia Delectorskaya, his beautiful young model (and secretary and live-in nurse), the great French painter poured out his pain and his grievances only in his correspondence with his second son, New York art dealer Pierre Matisse (1900-1989). In a captivating dual portrait, Russell, former chief art critic for the New York Times, draws on thousands of unpublished letters in the Pierre Matisse archive to illuminate an intense, difficult father-son dyad, as well as the pioneering gallery owner's tumultuous relations with his artists. Proud, reserved Pierre Matisse made the work of Mir?, Giacometti and Dubuffet part of the cultural landscape of the United States; he gave Balthus his first one-man show in New York in 1938; he helped develop Americans' taste for Picasso, Braque, Modigliani, Bonnard, de Chirico, Tanguy, Utrillo, Rouault and Calder. And despite Matisse p?re's detestation of his son's chosen profession, and the legend that he refused to help it along, Russell shows that the painter gave his son shrewd business advice. The famous father was morbidly sensitive to every nuance, real or imagined, in his son's letters, but he also proffered fatherly counsel and comfort during family crises, such as Pierre's 1949 breakup with his second wife, and marriage to 25-year-old Patricia Echaurren, the fiery daughter of Chilean-born surrealist Matta. Furthermore, this dazzlingly illustrated biography offhandedly provides a roadmap of the evolution of Modernist art simply by charting the artists who wander into the frame and their interactions with the likes of Sartre, Rilke, Andr? Breton and Walter Gropius. Doubleday Reader's Subscription main selection.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Henri Matisse was an avid letter writer, and his correspondence with his son, Pierre, is the basis of Russell's narrative. The Pierre Matisse Gallery in New York was until the late 1980s a discreet, discriminating bastion of primarily European modern art. Through decades of letters and Pierre's correspondence with some of the artists he represented, including Dubuffet and Mir?, we see the father-son and artist-dealer relationship firsthand. The real interest here, however, is Henri Matisse and his art. He is compelling in his own words as a father who wants to keep his family intact through a rancorous divorce, the occupation of Paris, the capture of his daughter Marguerite, life as a French resister, and later ill health. Pierre Matisse emerges as a good son who looks after everything just as his father instructs. Amusing morsels of gossip make the book worth reading; there is enough material here for several volumes. A friend of Pierre for many years, former New York Times chief art critic Russell has made an admirable first rendering of these newly available archives.AEllen Bates, New York
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
