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- <text id=90TT1732>
- <title>
- July 02, 1990: A Domain Of Light And Color
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 02, 1990 Nelson Mandela:A Hero In America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ART, Page 53
- A Domain of Light and Color
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Morocco's impact on Matisse is traced in a radiant show
- </p>
- <p>By Robert Hoghes
- </p>
- <p> "Matisse in Morocco," which opened Sunday at New York City's
- Museum of Modern Art (it was at the National Gallery in
- Washington through the spring, and will go to Moscow and
- Leningrad in the fall and winter), is what used to be called
- a connoisseurs' show. It covers a short time in a long life.
- Henri Matisse visited Morocco just twice, in early 1912 and
- again in the winter of 1912-13. Hence the exhibition is fairly
- small, only 24 paintings and a large group of sketchbook
- drawings. It can be seen without sore feet and framed as a whole
- in one's mind. It is thorough, scholarly--Jack Cowart, John
- Elderfield, Pierre Schneider and others have done a fine job
- on the catalog--and, above all, full of exhilaratingly
- beautiful paintings that have lost none of their sensuous
- finesse and cerebral sharpness in the nearly 80 years since
- Matisse made them.
- </p>
- <p> As a bonus, some of the paintings are being seen in the U.S.
- for the first time. Most of the best work that Morocco evoked
- from Matisse was bought by those two pioneer collectors Sergei
- Shchukin and Ivan Morosov and has remained in Leningrad's
- Hermitage and Moscow's Pushkin museums since the Russian
- revolution. As no reproduction has ever done justice to the
- peculiar intensity of the thin, washed, yet highly saturated
- color Matisse developed in Morocco, one is grateful that the
- components of this phase of his work have at last been reunited.
- Matisse was a mature painter of 42 when he went to Morocco,
- but what he learned from the trip struck to the very root of
- his development as an artist. He was tempted to make a third
- trip but never did.
- </p>
- <p> Why should he have gone to North Africa, a part of the world
- that Frenchmen in 1912 were still apt to generalize as "the
- Orient"? There were two basic reasons: cultural curiosity and
- the search for light.
- </p>
- <p> Matisse wanted a place where the sun shone reliably, like
- a lamp, where the conditions of light, constant from day to
- day, enabled him to pursue his researches into color without
- distraction. Later he would find this stability by moving
- permanently to Nice, but it was not available in Paris.
- Following the sun, going south to a domain of purer light and
- color, had been his obsession since his first trips to Provence
- in his Fauvist years. In North Africa it produced radiant
- motifs: the green garden, the white breastlike curves of
- marabout domes, the angled cuts of shadow in street and alley,
- the blue haze of light behind ogival arches.
- </p>
- <p> But Matisse's pictorial motives differed from those of all
- European artists who had visited "the Orient" before. French
- painters from the 1830s on, starting with Eugene Delacroix, had
- gone there in search of the picturesque, the exotic, the
- ready-made subject: mosques and Riffian horsemen, camels and
- harem slaves. By 1880 Orientalism had become a large fashion
- among salon painters and their clients. French artists brought
- their minutely realist style and their mildly prurient
- interests to Fez and Marrakech, and went back to Paris with both
- intact. To be influenced as a painter by Islamic art--architecture, rugs, tiles, cloth, miniatures--was
- inconceivable, like "going native." The imperious gaze went
- only one way; its view of Morocco was colonialism in paint.
- </p>
- <p> But Matisse was intensely interested in Muslim decorative
- arts, and it was their intrinsic style, not their use as exotic
- props, that affected him. He had been to Algeria in 1906. In
- 1910 he was bowled over by an exhibition of the art of Islam
- in Munich and by a visit to the Moorish monuments of Andalusia.
- As a result, he recalled, "I felt the passion for color develop
- in me." This was dramatically confirmed by Morocco, where
- Matisse's aesthetic of decoration took full hold. Flat pattern,
- inlaid motifs, sharp conjunctions of highly decorative forms--as in the wonderful Basket of Oranges, 1912, with the sharp
- forms of citrus fruit and their leaves competing against the
- more diffuse pattern of the flowered silk drape on which they
- rest--these were the signs of a world crammed with pictorial
- events, all common yet all august and tending to equivalent
- value.
- </p>
- <p> It seems that as Matisse's experience of Islamic art
- deepened, he tried to find equivalents for it, not only in his
- shapes but also in the substance of his paint. He worked
- increasingly in vaporous, quick washes thinned to watercolor
- transparency--stains of extraordinary beauty that establish
- a constant field of light against which the passages of denser
- paint and linear drawing create, by subtle inflection, the
- illusion of solidity. These are, in part, Matisse's response to
- the textiles and ceramics he observed, in which the color was
- dyed or glazed rather than opaquely painted.
- </p>
- <p> Light, landscape, enclosed gardens and domes were
- everywhere; regular human models, harder to come by. Matisse's
- main one was a girl named Zorah, who worked in a brothel in
- Tangier. She is most unforgettably commemorated in On the
- Terrace, the central panel of a triptych he painted in 1912-13,
- on commission for Morosov. Zorah kneels in front of a bowl of
- goldfish in the suffused aquamarine light of a terrace.
- Apparently Matisse was worried that Morosov would object to the
- use of a prostitute, since the central panels of Russian
- triptychs often contained figures of the Virgin Mary. But one
- can hardly doubt that the artist enjoyed the switch, and
- submissive Zorah does become a kind of Moroccan madonna.
- </p>
- <p> Zorah has many descendants in the artist's mature work, and
- it is evident that in Morocco Matisse's basic idea of the
- artist-model relationship crystallized. He began to envision
- the studio as a kind of harem, where the static and endlessly
- compliant figure submitted again and again to the pasha-like
- gaze of her observer.
- </p>
- <p> The great summing-up of Matisse's experience in North Africa
- occurred several years after he had returned to France, in The
- Moroccans, 1915-16. In that dense, grand and mysterious
- painting, the intensity of light is evoked, with all the
- courage of paradox, with a predominant velvety black. The
- ambiguous forms--Are the green curved objects in the left
- foreground melons, as some think, or the backsides of Muslims
- praying to Mecca?--combine in a pictorial structure of
- wonderful explicitness and rigor. One sees in the work painters
- who would not be born for another 20 or 30 years: Frank Stella,
- Sean Scully. Clearly, though Matisse left Morocco, Morocco
- never left him.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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