Skip to main content

The Steins Collect: Matisse, Picasso, and the Parisian Avant-Garde

Gertrude Stein by Pablo Picasso
The Metropolitan Museum of Art Exhibition Through June 3, 2012

The Stein siblings—Gertrude, Leo, Michael, and his wife Sarah—were important patrons of modern art in Paris during the first years of the 20th century. This American family collected hundreds of artworks by a group of relatively unknown artists with whom they became close friends. The Steins opened their apartments on Saturday evenings to anyone who arrived with a reference in hand. At these salons, scores of international artists, collectors, and dealers passed through their doors in order to see and discuss the latest artistic developments, long before they were on view in museums. Ultimately, the Steins’ enthusiasm for avant-garde art—particularly the work of Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso—had an indelible impact on its development for decades to come.

The Steins Collect: Matisse, Picasso, and the Parisian Avant-Garde—at The Metropolitan Museum of Art from February 28 through June 3, 2012—unites some 200 works of art to demonstrate the significant impact the Steins’ patronage had on the artists of their day and the way in which the family disseminated a new standard of taste for modern art. The exhibition traces the evolution of the Steins’ collections and examines the close relationships that formed between individual members of the family and their artist friends. While focusing on paintings by Matisse and Picasso, the exhibition will also include paintings, sculpture, and works on paper by Pierre Bonnard, Maurice Denis, Juan Gris, Marie Laurencin, Jacques Lipchitz, Henri Manguin, André Masson, Elie Nadelman, Francis Picabia, and others.

Leo Stein was a collector by nature. Once he settled in Paris in early 1903, he was amazed to discover that he could afford to purchase contemporary oil paintings. He was most attracted to colorful figurative work, traditional subject matter rendered in innovative ways. Leo’s youngest sister Gertrude joined him in the fall of 1903. Their eldest brother, Michael, together with his family, followed from California in January 1904. Leo was the driving force of the collection during these early years. After realizing that his plan to build a collection of paintings by Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, Édouard Manet, and Auguste Renoir was beyond his means, Leo changed strategies and instead began to purchase inexpensive paintings by relatively unknown younger artists. In 1905 he bought his first pictures by Picasso and Matisse.

Following Leo’s lead, Sarah and Michael began purchasing fairly inexpensive pictures by Cézanne, Gauguin, Manguin, Picasso, and Vallotton. They became close friends with Matisse after Leo introduced them in late 1905. Within three years, the walls of their apartment were filled with colorful canvases. With the exception of Matisse’s own studio, there was no better place to see his recent work.

The Steins had close bonds with the emerging artists whose works they collected. They went horseback riding and swimming with Henri Matisse and arranged for their friends from San Francisco, Harriet Lane Levy and Alice Toklas, to take French lessons from Picasso’s girlfriend, Fernande Olivier. It was not uncommon for Leo to have lunch with Matisse and dinner with Picasso in a single day. Both artists sent the Steins sketches and reports of their work in progress.

The Steins were natural networkers. They famously introduced Matisse to Picasso and made the art of the Parisian avant-garde available to hundreds of people who might not have had a chance to see it otherwise. The first documented visitors to 27, rue de Fleurus were Leo’s artist friends, who often found him pacing the studio or reclining on a daybed while extolling the individual merits of the pictures.

As word of the Steins’ collections spread, they were overwhelmed with requests for visits. A decision was made to consolidate the visits and open both Leo and Gertrude’s atelier and Sarah and Michael’s apartment on Saturday evenings to anyone who arrived with a reference. Artists, writers, musicians, and collectors convened to discuss the latest artistic developments. Visitors from the United States, Europe, and Russia spread news of what they had seen. By opening their homes and making their collections accessible, the Steins did more to support avant-garde painting than any other collectors or institutions during the first decade of the 20th century.

By late 1910, the modest two-bedroom apartment at 27, rue de Fleurus that Leo had initially rented for himself was home to three occupants: Leo, Gertrude, and her companion, Alice Toklas. Leo’s increasing deafness led him to distance himself from the Saturday evening salons, and by 1913 he recognized that it was time for him to leave rue de Fleurus altogether. Leo and Gertrude divided their collection. Gertrude kept the Picasso paintings, and Leo took 16 Renoirs. “Rather an amusing baggage for a leader in the great modern fight,” he conceded. Leo was relieved to live a quieter, simpler life with Nina Auzias, whom he married in 1921. He spent the rest of his years in Italy, France, and the United States, painting, writing and lecturing about aesthetics.

Meanwhile, Gertrude and Alice renovated the atelier and removed the frames from most of the paintings, which accentuated her more orderly display. Gertrude took her writing quite seriously, and friends noted that in books such as Tender Buttons (1914 ) and The Making of Americans (1925), Gertrude was “doing the same thing in literature that Matisse & Picasso [were] doing in art.”

World War I had a particularly devastating impact on Sarah and Michael’s collection. At Matisse’s request, they lent 19 of their largest and most important paintings by him to a July 1914 gallery exhibition in Berlin. When Germany declared war on France in early August, the paintings were trapped. After years of legal negotiations, Michael and Sarah opted to sell them to the Norwegian shipowner Tryggve Sagen and the Danish collector Christian Tetzen-Lund. Matisse regretted the turn of events and painted portraits of Sarah and Michael (1916; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art), the only portrait pendants he is known to have made. In the mid-1920s, the couple commissioned a villa from Le Corbusier. “After having been in the vanguard of the modern movement in painting in the early years of the century, we are now doing the same for modern architecture,” Michael said.

Of all the Steins, only Gertrude managed to keep the bulk of her collection together. She could no longer afford to buy paintings by the artists she had once supported. Most new acquisitions were gifts or acquired through trade, such as the last Picasso painting she added to her collection, Still Life (1922; The Art Institute of Chicago). Younger artists such as Louis Marcoussis, André Masson, Francis Rose, and Pavel Tchelitchew gravitated to Gertrude, flattered by her interest in them. She and Alice retreated to their country home at Bilignin during World War II, ignoring repeated warnings from the American Embassy to leave. It was probably Bernard Fäy, a close friend, translator of many of Gertrude’s writings, and influential Vichy collaborator, who protected her.

In the mid-1930s, Gertrude reminded her readers that the art of Matisse and Picasso was once scorned. “It is very difficult now that everybody is accustomed to everything to give some idea of the uneasiness once felt when one first looked at all these pictures on the walls.”

The Steins Collect; Matisse, Picasso, and the Parisian Avant-Garde revisits this decisive moment. It is the story of one American family residing in Paris who shaped the development of modern art for decades to come.




Highlights from the exhibition include Matisse’s Woman with a Hat (San Francisco Museum of Modern Art), purchased by Leo Stein from the famous “fauve” Salon d’Automne of 1905, and Picasso’s painting of Gertrude Stein (The Metropolitan Museum of Art), which will be presented alongside additional portraits of the Stein family by Matisse, Picasso, and Vallotton.

Life-size photographic enlargements of the Steins’ Parisian apartments will be displayed throughout the exhibition to show how the art was installed in the Steins’ residences. Additional themes covered in the exhibition include Sarah and Michael Stein’s role in the formation of the Académie Matisse, the influential art school that operated from 1908 to 1911; their commission of a villa from Le Corbusier; and Gertrude’s later friendships and collaborations with Juan Gris, Elie Lascaux, Francis Rose, and Virgil Thomson.

https://gluwhite-platinum.blogspot.com/
https://gluwhite2022.blogspot.com/
https://vien-sui-trang-da-gluwhite.blogspot.com/
https://vien-sui-gluwhite.blogspot.com/


Exhibition Credits and Catalogue
The Steins Collect: Matisse, Picasso, and the Parisian Avant-Garde is organized by Janet Bishop, curator of painting and sculpture at SFMOMA; Cécile Debray, curator of historical collections at the Musée National d’Art Moderne, Centre Pompidou, Paris; and Rebecca Rabinow, Curator in the Metropolitan Museum’s Department of Modern and Contemporary Art.

The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated, 492-page catalogue edited by Janet Bishop, Cécile Debray, and Rebecca Rabinow. The publication features new research, previously unpublished archival information, photographs illustrating how the Steins displayed their works of art, a facsimile of Sarah Stein’s notebook of Matisse’s teachings, an extensive chronology detailing the lives of the family members, and original essays by a range of French and American experts in the field: Isabel Alfandary, Janet Bishop, Emily Braun, Edward Burns, Cécile Debray, Claudine Grammont, Helene Klein, Martha Lucy, Carrie Pilto, Rebecca Rabinow, and Gary Tinterow. This authoritative volume also includes a timeline of the Steins' collecting activity created by Kate Mendillo and a catalogue of the family's holdings compiled by Robert McD. Parker, along with his presentation of rare photographs depicting the changing configurations of works on the walls of the various Stein salons. The catalogue is published by SFMOMA in association with Yale University Press, and is for sale in the Museum’s book shops (hardcover $75, paperback $50).

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Thực phẩm làm đẹp của Nhật Bản gồm những chất nào? 2019

Bắt đầu từ trên xuống dưới, với tóc, có thể dùng rong biển, vừng (mè), tôm và tía tô. Trong đó, tôm và tía tô rất hữu ích cho người bị rụng tóc, chúng còn làm tăng tuần hoàn máu ở da đầu. Rong biển và vừng thì làm cho tóc mạnh, dày, ấm, bóng. Với da thì dùng gạo đỏ, bo bo, đậu nành đen, tỏi, lá củ cải, nấm shiitake, đậu phụ, kiều mạch và củ sen. Ngoài việc làm đẹp da, các chất này còn có những công dụng khác. Ví dụ bo bo nếu ăn sáng hàng ngày thì da hồng hào, tỏi có tính kháng khuẩn rất tốt để chị viết thương ngoài da. Các chất khác cung cấp những vitamin quan trọng, kích thích sự bài tiết chất thải và chất độc, kích thích sự trao đổi chất và sự tuần hoàn máu, và cung cấp độ ấm. Thực đơn nên cân đối, không nên dồn dập ăn chỉ một loại thực phẩm trong một thời gian dài. Ngày nay các món ăn tinh chế ngày càng hấp dẫn khẩu vị khiến cho ngay cả người Nhật vốn xưa nay thanh mảnh là thế mà bây giờ cũng phổ biến hiện tượng phát phì. Khốn thay lại không có thực phẩm nào chống béo phì. Do đó

Thắc mắc uống nước nhiều có bị béo không? 2019

Trước hết bạn phải nói rõ là uống gì? Chúng ta hãy điểm qua những thức uống và lựa chọn: Nước ngọt Hiện nay thị trường nước ngọt ở nước ta có hàng chục loại nước ngọt với những mẫu mã, bao bì phong phú, bắt mắt. Uống nước ngọt gây béo vì lượng đường vào cơ thể được nhanh chóng hấp thu và qua gan chuyển thành mỡ dự trữ. Một tác dụng nữa là khi vào máu, chất đường làm tăng một loại áp suất gọi là áp suất thẩm thấu khiến “Trung tâm khát” ở não bị kích thích. Bạn lại uống và tăng cân là thế. Nếu bạn nào ở vùng trồng mía, đến mùa thu hoạch được ăn mía thỏa chí, chẳng cần ăn cơm cũng béo, đúng không nào? Nếu thế bạn sẽ hỏi? Vậy tôi có thể uống nước đường không sinh năng lượng như aspartam có được không? Thưa bạn, đây là loại đường không sinh năng lượng thường để dành cho người tiểu đường nhầm đánh lừa cảm giác thèm ngọt. Khi biết chắc rằng nó chẳng cần cho bạn thì bạn tạo ra thói quen uống nước ngọt để làm gì chứ? Cà phê Nhiều chị có thói quen uống cà phê buổi sáng, có người uống một ng

Bác sĩ nâng mũi giỏi và uy tín cần đáp ứng được những tiêu chí nào? 2019

Ngoài việc đảm bảo sức khỏe để tiến hành phẫu thuật, việc tìm được một bác sĩ nâng mũi có trình độ chuyên môn giỏi và uy tín cũng là một yếu tố quan trọng quyết định sự thành công của ca phẫu thuật cũng như sự hài lòng về kết quả. Vì vậy, hãy chắc chắn rằng bạn đã tìm hiểu kĩ vị bác sĩ đó đã đáp ứng được đầy đủ 10 tiêu chí dưới đây trước khi quyết định nâng mũi nhé! Đào tạo bài bản, có trình độ chuyên môn Chắc hẳn bạn luôn mong muốn ca phẫu thuật của mình được thực hiện bởi một bác sĩ đã kinh qua trường lớp đào tạo bài bản và có tay nghề giỏi. Một bác sĩ am hiểu sâu về lĩnh vực anh ta làm kèm theo sự hiểu biết chuyên môn sâu rộng, chắc hẳn sẽ tư vấn cho bạn được nhiều điều hơn. Trên thực tế, một bác sĩ được đào tạo về chỉnh hình khuôn mặt, nhưng nếu anh ta có thêm nền tảng về chỉnh hình vách ngăn (septoplasty) sẽ là một lợi thế cho bạn. Hội đồng chứng nhận Có thể bạn không biết rằng việc bác sĩ có giấy phép hành nghề hợp lệ hay không qua đào tạo về thẩm mĩ mà vẫn thực hiện phẫu thu