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- <text id=90TT1937>
- <title>
- July 23, 1990: A Lyrical Colorist Rediscovered
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 23, 1990 The Palestinians
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ART, Page 76
- A Lyrical Colorist Rediscovered
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>De Stael painted by "the rule that corrects the emotion"
- </p>
- <p>By Robert Hughes
- </p>
- <p> Some artists have all the luck; others, in the long run,
- have very little, and Nicolas de Stael was one of these. Born
- in 1914, a suicide at 41 in 1955, De Stael was practically the
- last painter of the School of Paris whose work had much impact
- on American taste, before the doctrine of U.S. national
- supremacy in painting took hold.
- </p>
- <p> He was hailed by critics like the formidable Douglas Cooper--whose vociferous dislike of De Stael's later work
- contributed to the depression that caused the painter to jump
- from his own balcony in Antibes--as "the most considerable,
- the truest and the most fascinating young painter to appear on
- the scene, in Europe or elsewhere, during the last 25 years."
- His influence was wide. Those cakes of thick pigment, those
- creamy, generous brushstrokes inlaid like rough marquetry over
- their contrasting grounds, struck many artists in the 1950s
- as a viable alternative to the linear, quasi-geometric
- abstraction that had grown out of the cubist grid. But though
- De Stael had a healthy effect on two or three major artists,
- especially the English painter Frank Auerbach, most of his
- imitators were insipid, and their weakness reflected on De
- Stael's own reputation.
- </p>
- <p> Probably half his output ended up in U.S. collections. Yet
- today, if he is not quite a forgotten artist in America, De
- Stael is without doubt a grievously neglected one. His music
- went out of fashion: the suave, reflective, at times slightly
- too decorative appeal to the senses inherited from Matisse, the
- thoughtful sense of paint-substance he had learned from the
- artist he admired above all others, his older friend and mentor
- Georges Braque. And it was true that De Stael had a weakness
- for the charming formula that was not dispelled by his frenetic
- rate of production. In his short maturity, less than a decade
- from 1947 to his death, he turned out more than 1,000
- pictures.
- </p>
- <p> The De Stael exhibition now on view at the Phillips
- Collection in Washington is the first serious attempt in a
- quarter-century to set him before an American public. "Nicolas
- de Stael in America" holds, along with a few routine pictures,
- some marvelous moments. There are paintings whose intelligence
- and sensuous pressure stop you in your tracks, images that seem
- all the fresher for their long spell in limbo. And the Phillips
- Collection is the right place for them. Its founder, Duncan
- Phillips, was the first American to buy De Stael in depth, and
- one has only to move to the other floors of this beloved
- institution to see the context from which De Stael sprang: the
- Matisses, the Bonnards, the late Braques, the august but now
- almost extinct line of arcadian modernism.
- </p>
- <p> De Stael was a romantic figure, a White Russian nobleman,
- son of the Baron Vladimir Ivanovitch de Stael-Holstein, who was
- dispossessed by the revolution. He was very tall, with a
- booming voice, a lyrical intelligence and the manic-depressive
- character of so many Russians, now lethargic and broody, now
- consumed with febrile energy. Desperately poor most of his
- life, he was generous to the point of folly; when money came,
- he threw it away like a cavalryman on a binge. He was acutely
- conscious of lineage and tradition. The art of the past, one
- might say, became De Stael's absent father. He began his public
- career as an abstract painter and backed into figuration, thus
- annoying a number of Parisian critics who prided themselves on
- their advanced taste.
- </p>
- <p> At the top of the painter's form, the pigment is both
- concrete and extremely sensitive. De Stael could give a sheet
- of paint, applied with a wide palette knife, the receptivity
- and sheen of skin, inserting gradations of color so subtle that
- they have no hope of showing up in reproduction. In Nice, 1954,
- with the simplest means--a few bars of awning-green and two
- shockingly vivid shapes, a red and a black, that may signify
- deck chairs or possibly buildings--he could put you right in
- the middle of a Mediterranean summer. Still, the punch of the
- image, which would otherwise be merely schematic, is modulated
- by the ethereal tenderness of the paint.
- </p>
- <p> De Stael's paint always betokens light, even--perhaps
- especially--when, like Braque's, it is black. It shows its
- descent from the noble directness of touch in Manet. And there
- is a vast appetite for the world in it. One could wish that
- this show had included a few more of the paintings De Stael did
- of soccer players--heraldic yet energetic blocks of primary
- color, moving on the floodlit field of the Parc des Princes
- outside Paris--for they are the summa of his love of the
- physical. "On grass that is either red or blue," he wrote to
- his friend the poet Rene Char, "there whirls a ton of muscle
- in complete disregard for self with, against all sensibilities,
- a great sense of presence. What joy!"
- </p>
- <p> The painting that is perhaps the star of this show is
- Agrigento, 1954. It is based on a Sicilian archaeological site
- De Stael visited, now defiled by condos and hotels but in those
- days a bare array of hills crowned with the vestiges of Greek
- temples. The picture might have degenerated into an orgy of
- color, with its tomato-red sky and purple patches. Instead the
- balance is so finely held between the colored cuts and
- triangles--two orange, four lemon-yellow, three purple and
- so on--that one sees how strong De Stael's formal constraints
- were, even when he had color turned up to maximum. Braque once
- said, "I love the rule that corrects the emotion." The same was
- true of De Stael.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-