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Avant-Garde Modern Art (meaning mostly painting) Paris was the capital of Modernism and the art world between A Brief Introduction.

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Presentación del tema: "Avant-Garde Modern Art (meaning mostly painting) Paris was the capital of Modernism and the art world between A Brief Introduction."— Transcripción de la presentación:

1 Avant-Garde Modern Art (meaning mostly painting) Paris was the capital of Modernism and the art world between 1850-1940 A Brief Introduction

2 Henri Matisse's 1937 L’Odalisque, harmonie bleue sold for $33.6 million at Christie’s auction on November 6, 2007. Modern art has higher market value than the “Old Masters.”

3 Francisco Laso (Peru), Dweller in the Cordillera, 1855 Tarsila do Amaral (Brazil), Abaporu, 1928 Academic versus Avant-Garde painting. Why do these paintings look different?

4 Claude Monet, Impression (Sunrise), 1873 Claude Lorraine, Landscape with Apollo and Mercury, 1645 Modern revolution in formal language of painting

5 Auguste Renoir (left), Mont Sainte-Victoire, 1889 compared with Paul Cézanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire, 1889, painted side by side Impressionist Renoir painting side by side with Post-Impressionist Cezanne

6 Georges Seurat, A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of la Grande Jatte, 1884-86, o/c 6’’9” x 10’ Art Institute of Chicago. Pointillism Increasing abstraction of modern painting / subject matter is modern life

7 Paul Signac, The Gulf of Sainte Tropez, 1892 - Pointillism compare Henri Matisse, Luxe, Calme, et Volupté, 1904 early Fauvism From Pointillism to Fauvism – increasing freedom from mimetic illusionism

8 Henri Matisse, Woman with a Hat (Madame Matisse), 1904-5 (right) Matisse, The Green Stripe (Madame Matisse), 1905 Fauvism – arbitrary color, gestural and obvious brush stroke – Rules of Western painting are broken in favor of direct expression

9 (left) Henri Matisse, Joy of Life, 1905-06 - Fauvism (right) Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon,1907 - Cubism

10 Modern art was transformed by the influence of non-Western art. In the early 20 th century the primary source was African tribal sculpture “It is as if someone had drunk kerosene to spit fire."

11 Georges Braque (French), Houses at L’Estaque, August 1908, oil on canvas, 28 x 23” Early Cubism

12 (right) Picasso, Reservoir at Horta, summer 1909, with photograph of the Spanish town by the artist. Development of Cubism – arbitrary light and architectonic space that ignores the rules of scientific linear perspective. Proto-Cubism

13 (left) Picasso, Ma Jolie (Woman with a Guitar), 1911 (right) Braque, The Portuguese (The Emigrant), 1911 High Analytic Cubism

14 Umberto Boccioni (Italian Futurist, 1882-1916), States of Mind I: The Farewells, 1911 – Italian Futurism compare right: Picasso, Ma Jolie, 1911 – Analytic Cubism Italian Futurism developed out of (School of Paris) Cubism – reintroduction of motion (diagonals) and color.

15 Luigi Russolo, Dynamism of an Automobile, 1912-1913, oil on canvas, 106 x 140 cm (right) Boccioni, Dynamism of a Soccer Player, 1913

16 Avant-garde Modern Art in Latin America

17 (left) Armando Reverón (Venezuela, 1889-1954), The Cave, 1919, oil on canvas, 40 X 61 inches, Caracas, Venezuela, Private collection (right) Francisco Goya (Spanish painter and printmaker, 1746-1848) Naked Maja, 1800 ; and Edouard Manet (French avant-garde), 1863 http://www.moma.org/exhibitions/2007/reveron/ http://www.moma.org/exhibitions/2007/reveron/

18 Armando Reverón, (left) Landscape and Shack, 1924 (right) Coconut Tree, c. 1940 First 20 th century artist to focus on the landscape of his own country.

19 Armando Reverón, Self Portrait with Dolls, c. 1949, charcoal, chalk, crayon, and pastel on paper on cardboard, 35 X 32 inches

20 Joaquín Clausell (Mexican, 1866 - 1935), La ola roja (The Red Wave), ca. 1910, oil on canvas, 100 X 150 cm. Mexican Impressionism / Post- Impressionism. Traveled to Europe in 1892-3 (including Paris) during the Porfiriato (1876-1911). Influenced by French Impressionism and possibly met French Impressionist Claude Monet and/or Camille Pissarro (who was born on St. Thomas).

21 Joaquín Clausell (Mexican, 1866 - 1935), La ola roja (The Red Wave), ca. 1910, oil on canvas, 100 X 150 cm. Mexican Impressionism / Post- Impressionism. Claude Monet, (French Impressionist) Rock Arch West of Etretat (The Manneport) 1883, oil on canvas, 65.4 x 81.3 cm (25 3/4 x 32 in); Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

22 Joaquín Clausell (Mexican, 1866 - 1935), La ola roja (The Red Wave), ca. 1910, oil on canvas, 100 X 150 cm. Mexican Impressionism / Post- Impressionism. Influence of European modern art. José Maria Velasco (Mexican academic landscape painter), Valley of Mexico from the Hill of Santa Isabel, 1877, o/c, 5’3”x7’6”

23 Joaquín Clausell, Fuentes Brotantes (Fuentes Brotantes Park, Mexico City), 1910-1920 (none of his works are dated), oil on canvas, 89 X 150 cm

24 Dr. Alt (Gerardo Murillo, Mexican 1865-1964), The Volcanos, 1950, oil on masonite, 54 X 102 inches. According to Orozco, Dr. Alt came back from his first trip to Europe in 1904 with “the rainbow of the impressionists in his hands and... All the audacities of the Parisian School,” and he conveyed his enthusiasm to his Mexican colleagues with enthusiasm.

25 Dr. Alt (Gerardo Murillo, Mexican 1865-1964), The Volcanos, 1950, oil on masonite, 54 X 102 inches. José Maria Velasco (Mexican academic landscape painter), Valley of Mexico from the Hill of Santa Isabel, 1877, o/c, 5’3”x7’6” Which painting shows the influence of Avant-Garde Western Modernism?

26 Gerardo Murillo (Dr. Alt), The Paricutin Volcano Erupting, 1943, oil on canvas, 50 X 31in. Photograph below is of the 1943 cinder cone eruption.

27 Diego Rivera (Mexican, born Diego María de la Concepción Juan Nepomuceno Estanislao de la Rivera y Barrientos Acosta y Rodríguez, 1886 - 1957), House over the Bridge, 1909, painted in Spain. The artist is 23 years old. Is this a Modernist painting?

28 (left) Diego Rivera, At the Fountain near Toledo, 1913, oil on canvas, 25.5 X 31.5 in. (top right) Piet Mondrian (Dutch, 1872–1944), Still Life with Ginger Jar, 1912. Mondrian was Rivera’s neighbor in Paris. (below right), Paul Cézanne (French Post-Impressionist, 1839-1906), 1885 Costumbrista, Symbolism, Cézanne, Cubism

29 Amedeo Modigliani (Italian in Paris from 1906, 1884-1920), Diego Rivera, c. 1908. (right) Modigliani, Portrait of the Jean Cocteau. 1916, Oil on canvas. 100 x 81 cm. Modigliani and Rivera were close friends in the Montmartre bohemian circle.

30 (left) Diego Rivera, Woman at the Well, 1913 (right) Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881-1973), Girl with a Mandolin, 1910 Pre-Analytic Cubism

31 (left) Diego Rivera, The Architect, 1914 (right) Pablo Picasso, Three Musicians, 1921 Synthetic Cubism

32 Diego Rivera, Angeline and the Infant Diego, 1916. Rivera met Russian avant-garde artist Angeline Beloff in Europe and stayed with her from 1911- 1921 when he returned to Mexico without her. Angeline Beloff gave birth to a son, Diego, who died before he was two years old.

33 General Porfirio Díaz (1830-1915) Left: 1867, during Mexico’s fight against French intervention Right: 1908 President of Mexico (from 1876 to 1880 and from 1884 to 1911)

34 Pancho Villa (1877-1923) Emiliano Zapata (1887-1919) Jose Vasconcelos Secretary of Education under Obregón Álvaro Obregón, President of Mexico, 1920–25 Mexican Revolution 1910-1920

35 Diego Rivera, Zapatista Landscape – The Guerilla, 1915 Painted in Paris – Mexican subject and Synthetic Cubist style

36 (left) Tarsila do Amaral (Brazil, 1886-1973), Self-Portrait, oil on paper, 15 in. H, 1924 (right) Amaral, Portrait of Oswald de Andrade, 1922.

37 Tarsila do Amaral, Self Portrait, oil on canvas, 30 in. H. 1920(?) Amaral studied in Paris 1920- June 1922 and December 1922 to December 1923 Avant-garde modern art and rejection of academic art Post-Impressionist style – the brushstroke is obvious and gestural, an impression is captured rather than strict mimetic illusionism, but the palette is “local” (realistic) and the figure is foreshortened and shaded to give a traditional illusion of three dimensionality.

38 (left) Anita Malfatti (Brazilian, 1889-1964), La boba, 1915. Amaral’s correspondant in Sâo Paulo, Malfatti was in Germany between 1910-1915. Malfatti’s 1917 exhibition in Sao Paulo, provoked hostility and scandal. (right) Ernst Kirchner (German Expressionist) Self-Portrait as Soldier, 1916

39 Anita Malfatti, The Yellow Man, 1915-16, charcoal and pastel on paper, 61 X 45.5 cm, Sao Paulo, Brazil

40 Cover of catalog from art exhibition from the Semana de Arte Moderna (Week of Modern Art), an arts festival in São Paulo, Brazil, from February 11 to February 18, 1922 organized by Mário de Andrade and the Group of Five. The illustration is by Emiliano di Cavalcanti.

41 “I am deeply Brazilian and I am going to study the taste and the art of our country people. I hope to learn with those who have not been corrupted by the academies. To be a Brazilian artist is not to paint only Brazilian landscapes and farmhands.” - Tarsila do Amaral, 1923 (Paris)

42 (right) Amaral, Black Woman, 1923, oil, (painted in Paris), Museum of Contemporary Art, U of Sâo Paulo. Compare with 1920 self portrait (center) (left) Constantin Brancusi (Romanian) Blonde Negress, 1926 School of Paris Primitivism

43

44 Paul Gauguin, Self-portrait, ceramic mug, c.1890 with Moche portrait ceramic vessel, c. 700 CE, Peru. Gauguin, part indigenous Peruvian, is considered the Father of Primitivism in Western art.

45 (left) Amaral, Abaporu (“Man who eats” in Tupi-Guarani),1928, oil, 33 ½ in H Inspired Andrade’s “Anthropophagite Manifesto”: cannibalism as a metaphor for Brazil’s transformation of European culture (right) Albert Gleizes (French “academic” Cubist 1881-1953), Stravinsky, 1919.

46 (left) Amaral, An Angler, mid-1920’s, the Hermitage (right) Carnival in Madureira, 1924, oil on canvas, 30 in. H Travels with French poet, Blaise Cendrars and Oswald de Andrade, 1924 Palette signifies “Brazil” versus “Europe” “…colors I had adored as a child. I was later taught they were ugly and unsophisticated.”

47 Amaral, Central Railway of Brazil, 1924, oil, 56 in. H, Sâo Paulo compare Fernand Léger (French Cubist, 1881-1955) The City, 1919 Embrace of modernity? Colonial Cubism? “Cubism is the military service of the artist. To be strong, every artist should go through it” - Amaral

48 Poetry exists in facts. The shacks of saffron and ochre among the greens of the hillside favelas, under cabraline blue, are aesthetic facts. We have a dual heritage – the jungle and the school. Our credulous mestizo race, then geometry, algebra and chemistry after the baby's bottle and herbal tea. Oswald de Andrade Pau-Brazil Poetry manifesto 1924,

49 (left) Amaral, Urutu (a poisonous snake) 1928, oil, 24 in. H, private collection, Río de Janeiro. (right) Giorgio de Chirico, Italian Metaphysical School (proto-Surrealism) The Great Metaphysician, c. 1913 Influence of Surrealism and current Brazilian notion of the country as a great snake

50 Amaral, Antropofagia, 1929, oil, 50 in. H “No one has penetrated as well as she did the wildness of our land, the barbarian which is each one of us, the true Brazilians who are eating with all possible ferocity the old culture of importation, the old unusable art, all the prejudices,” Oswald de Andrade for Amaral’s first exhibition in Brazil 1929.

51 Pedro Figari (Uruguay, 1861-1938), On the Patio, after 1921, oil on cardboard, 60 X 80 cm. Moved to Buenos Aires in 1921, at 60 years of age, and began to paint full time. Worked in Paris after 1925; returned to Montevideo in 1932 “My conviction has been to elevate our culture and make us love the American things that are so very much ours.” - Figari

52 (right) Édouard Vuillard (French Post-Impressionist and Nabi painter, 1868- 1940), Mother and Sister of the Artist. c. 1893. Oil on canvas. 18 1/4 x 22 1/4" (left) Pedro Figari, On the Patio, n.d., oil on cardboard, 60 X 80 cm Figari had studied in Italy and France in his youth. Returned to France in 1925 where he continued to paint scenes of mid- to late 19 th century Uruguay from memory, giving us a world that was vanishing.

53 Figaro, African Nostalgia, 1921-32, oil on cardboard, 80 x 60 cm, the candombe, the African (hybrid Bantu)-Uruguayan celebration on Sundays and Christian festival days. Today only the musical gatherings continue.

54 Candombe paintings by Pedro Figari, 1932 ( he was 71 years old), painted from childhood memories of mid-nineteenth century candombe gatherings of the 1860s and ’70s. (Slavery was abolished in Uruguay in 1846.) The memory is of the “tango” houses, off-limits to the general public in Montevideo of the time. Celebrations were accompanied by the sound of the Tambor. In Africa, Tambor and the person playing it are defined by the same word, Tambor. http://www.candombe.com/sound/candombe_street.ramhttp://www.candombe.com/sound/candombe_street.ram

55 “I have always lived on the margins of written poetry, like the most mystical of the uncouth, and I feel human: I laugh, cry, suffer, moved, I tremble and am utterly startled, and submit mad like a lover to my dreams. As I approach the end, without knowing why, suddenly I feel the irresistible desire to display my dreams, believing them to be good, and if they hold some human essence they are good, and I hope they live, they are my guide.” - Pedro Figari, Paris 1927

56 Pedro Figari, The Bell for Prayer, n.d., oil on cardboard, 27 X 38 inches, Montevideo “a vanished or vanishing world” Contrasted white Creole world with African and mixed.

57 Pedro Figari (Uruguayan, 1861-1938), The Little Horse, 1921, oil on cardboard, 97 x 67 cm

58 “Figari is the pure temptation of his memory. These immemorial features of Creole life - the mahogany tree that seems a constant bonfire of freshness, the ombú worthy of triple devotion for giving shade, being recognized from afar, and being the shepherd of the birds, the delicate wrought-iron screen door, the patio, place of serenity, rose of the days, the surprise gust of south wind which leaves a thistle flower in the doorway -are family relics now. They are creatures of memory, even if they still exist. And we know that memory's method is lyric. Figari's work is lyric.” Jorge Luis Borges, 'Figari‘ Buenos Aires Editorial, 1930 Pedro Figari, Horses, n.d., oil on board, 62x82 cm.

59 Figari, After the Event, n.d., oil on cardboard, 62 x 80 cm ombu tree on the pampas

60 Pettoruti, Dynamism, graphite, 1915, Argentine Futurism Luigi Russolo, Dynamism of an Automobile, 1913, oil, Italian Futurism Emilio Pettoruti (Argentina 1892-1970) Argentine Avant-Garde was launched in 1924 with the founding in Buenos Aires of Martin Fierro, a cosmopolitan artist magazine and a controversial exhibition of paintings by Emilio Pettoruti later the same year. Martin Fierro’s manifesto – “…we are in the presence of a NEW SENSIBILITY and of a NEW COMPREHENSION” and “new means and forms of expression.” (caps in original)

61 (left) Emilio Pettoruti, Harlequin, 1925, oil on canvas, 27 in H (lower right) Pettoruti, The Quintet, 1927 compare (top center) Picasso, Three Musicians, 1921, Synthetic Cubism Plays a bandoneon, an accordion-like Instrument used in tango ensembles.

62 Pettoruti, (right) Blue Grotto of Capri, 1918, oil, 34 x 24 in Cubism (left) Pettoruti, Three Cigarettes, 1934 “Only Modern art speaks to us from up close. Only Modern art moves and arouses us, saying lively things, things that are our own, things that show us the way to tomorrow.” - Pettoruti, “The Situation of the Modern Artist,” 1968

63 Xul Solar (Oscar Agustín Alejandro Schulz Solari, Argentina, 1888-1963) “I am maestro of a writing no one reads yet” and “I am world champion of a game no one knows.” [an invented American language (Neocriollo), a universal language that he called Panlengua, and a game (panjuego) based on chess] Student of Theosophy, the Cabala, astrology, and pre-Columbian Mythology, Solar practiced meditation to experience mystical exaltation.

64 Xul Solar contributed writings in Pan Crillo to Martin Fierro and like to speak in Pan Criollo: “Olas, ólitas, vintos, hálitos, réspiras, kinflores, hondónadas, pirmanchas, kingramas, biovacíos, tunzoes: too fon.” [“Waves, wavies, wine-reds, breath-rests, kinflowers, profundiads, firestains, kingrams, biovoids, tongtoes: Too fun.”]

65 Xul Solar, Pareja (Couple), 1923, watercolor on paper, 10 x 13 in. Compare (right) Paul Klee, Swiss modernist, Hammamet with Mosque, 1914 “Xul took on the task of reforming the universe, of proposing on this earth a different order. For that, among other things, he changed the current numerical system of mathematics to use a duodecimal system, with which he painted his watercolors.” Jorge Luis Borges

66 Xul Solar, Jefa [Priestess], 1923 The whiskered woman suggests the feline cult of the Egyptian godess Isis of life to death and rebirth of the god Osiris

67 (left) Xul Solar, Drago, 1927 (right) Joan Miro, Spanish modernist, School of Paris, Harlequin Carnival, 1924

68 Joaquín Torres-García (Uruguayan painter and sculptor, 1874-1949) Returned to Montevideo in 1934 after a 43-year absence in Madrid, Barcelona, Paris, and New York. “Constructive Universalism” and Abstraction

69 JOAQUÍN TORRES-GARCÍA, 1943 DRAWING, COVER PAGE MAP OF SCHOOL OF THE SOUTH, MONTEVIDEO, EL TALLER TORRES- GARCIA, 1958 “I have said School of the South: because, in fact, our North looks South. For us there must not be a North, except in opposition to the South… This correction was necessary; because of it we know where we are.”

70 Joaquín Torres-García, New York, 1921

71 Torres-Garcia, Constructive Painting (The Cellar), 1921

72 Joaquín Torres-García, Interior, 1924, oil on cardboard, 37.5 x 51.5 cm.

73 (left) Joaquín Torres-García, Composition, 1932, oil on canvas, 28 x 20" (right) Piet Mondrian, Still Life with Ginger Jar, 1912 (lower right) Mondrian Tableau, 1921 (Neoplasticism) Torres-Garcia met Mondrian in Paris in 1929. New use of the grid with pictographs would be the basis of his constructive universalism.

74 Universal Constructivism of Torres-Garcia was influenced by Andean pre- Hispanic regions where art was often based on geometric patterns. Compare Inca woven tunic (left), c. 1476-1534 with Torres-Garcia, Composition, 1932 (right)

75 (right) Joaquín Torres-García, Constructive Painting with Curved Forms, wood, nails, paint, 1931 (right) Vladimir Tatlin (Russian Constructivist, 1885-1953 ), Painterly Relief, 1914

76 Joaquín Torres-García, Dog, painted wood construction, 1924- 1925

77 Torres-García, Constructivist Painting No. 8, 1938, gouache on paperboard, 31 5/8 in. x 19 1/2 in. SFMOMA

78 Joaquin Torres-Garcia, Cosmic Monument, 1938, pink granite, Parque Jose Enrique Rodo, Montevideo. A plaque on the ground nearby has incised on it the cardinal points reversed, so “sur” (south) appears at the top and “norte” (north) at the bottom

79 Gate of the Sun, Bolivia, 500 C.E. Joaquin Torres-Garcia, Cosmic Monument, 1938, made of separate blocks. Cube, sphere, and pyramid on top represent the most timeless and stable of geometric forms. Torres-Garcia’s work provides a counter to the “Magic Realism” attached to Latin American art and has been extremely influential.


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