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Henri Matisse: The Cut Outs
R**N
Perhaps the definitive book for most readers. A handsome volume.
I found the level of detail in this book most illuminating and the book itself very rewarding to read. It really does answer many of the questions that the average reader is likely to ask and provides a handsome but affordable addition to any library of twentieth century art.
P**L
Loving reading about Matisse’s later life and how he adapted his style, around his infirmities.
Don’t know how I missed this exhibition when it was on in 2014, but loving exploring the catalogue with its detail about Matisse and his cutouts. What an imaginative way to deal with being almost bedridden.
L**E
Perfect art coffee table book
Book arrived in great quality, and shows all of the work from my favourite artist Matisse. I show it off on the coffee table ha!
T**L
Cut It Out......!!!
I got this after visiting the Exhibition at The Tate....at a bargain price.This is a beautiful book....with some fantastic choices of illustrations. I guess to really appreciate these pieces...you need to see the size and scale in the flesh... They are stunning.The book really helped consolidate the visit...and inspired me get the scissors out and start chopping up the paper shapes.
M**K
Great catalogue to a great exhibition
So often the best thing about catalogues to art exhibitions are the illustrations and the essays disappoint as either being too niche or very vague. This dies not apply to this catalogue. The essays are excellent, very readable and enlightening and make a perfect accompaniment to the pictures and to the exhibition. This is one of the best exhibition catalogues I have bought and read.
S**G
Stunning
A great exhibition and an outstanding catalogue. Has many interesting photographs of Matisse at work in his studios and good quality reproductions of the works themselves on good quality paper. Reproductions of the cut-outs sometimes render the areas of colour too even but here you can clearly see the texture of their hand painting. Good value too. I can't recommend it highly enough.
S**E
Well presented work on a master.
This is a beautiful book - giving plenty of space to show the late works of Matisse and therefore does his work justice. The background information is easy to read. Wonderful book to own and to keep referring to - if only for the visual buzz!
B**M
Excellent
A wonderful reminder of a marvellous exhibition. And lots of the detail that you could not see at the time.
J**Z
La calidad superó mis expectativas
Absolutamente formidable
T**A
A visual feast
The book is beautifully printed, with colours and shapes that delight the eye and invite the touch.
S**A
Book was damaged on delivery
I needed this book for Uni. It was damaged on delivery and I didn't want to return it because I needed it.
N**O
Atendeu as minhas necessidades.
Estava esperando exatamente isso. Uma visão da exposição de Matisse. Ayendeu prontamente as minhas ncessidades. Recomendo a todos. Muito bom.
K**S
Matisse's Cut-outs at the MoMA
This is the catalogue of the exhibition organized by New York's Museum of Modern Art, mounted at the Tate Modern in London from April to September 2014 and then at the MoMA from October 2014 until February 2015. The impetus for the exhibition was the major campaign of conservation of Matisse's huge "The Swimming Pool" cut-out, which the artist designed for his dining room in the Hôtel Régina in Nice in 1952; the Museum restored and remounted it and, in this exhibition, presents it once again to the public for the first time in over twenty years--but now, in order to reflect its original environment, it has been newly installed in a room constructed with the original proportions, details, and architecture of Matisse's dining room. This is a very major exhibition, the most extensive presentation of Matisse's cut-outs ever mounted. Although "The Swimming Pool" is its conceptual heart, the show encompasses a much wider range of works, including illustrated books, textiles, stained glass, and related drawings. The explosion of creativity and imagination that Matisse presented as the last act of his artistic life is truly amazing; it is not given to many people to invent an entirely new art form in their seventies, especially not one that vibrates with such youthful exuberance and juice as these cut-outs do. When he exhibited "Zulma" at the Salon de Mai in 1952 (at the tender age of eighty-two), critics referred to it as "the youngest and most innovative work there," and to himself as "the youngest exhibitor" (162), and in looking through this volume, I kept having to remind myself that Matisse was, in fact, really, born in 1869 and already over thirty at the turn of the century.This remarkable body of late work is authoritatively discussed in the catalogue's nine essays, all of which were written by senior curators and conservators at the Tate, the MoMA, or New York's Metropolitan Museum. They are short and concise (about eight or nine pages on average) and generously illustrated by some seventy accompanying reproductions. Topics discussed include how the artist came upon the idea of the cut-out in the beginning; their gradual evolution from simple maquettes in the service of developing works to independent works of art on their own, and Matisse's own growing realization of what they were; their reception by critics and the public at large; the "Dance" mural for the Barnes Foundation and designs for the ballet "Rouge et Noir"; the cut-outs for the "Jazz" book; designs for the Chapel at Vence and the late monumental mural works, etc. These are all thoughtful and informative essays; I was particularly intrigued by Samantha Friedman's "Game and Endgame," which elucidates the compositional permutations of the pieces on the model of the chessboard; and by Nicholas Cullinan's "Chromatic Composition," which examines the intermediate, ambivalent position of the cut-outs between figuration and abstraction (e.g., Matisse gave his 1953 piece "The Snail" the alternative title "Composition Chromatique," much as--in a very different context--Whistler's painting slips between "Portrait of the Artist's Mother" and "Arrangement in Grey and Black No. 1"). There is also a fascinating technical examination of the paints, papers, mounting practices, etc. used in creating these works, procedures at least as complicated as those involved in any of the more traditional media. In addition, there is a sixty-page photo essay, "In the Studio," which is not merely the kind of supplementary collection of workshop photos we find in many catalogues, but an essential component in understanding Matisse's creative process: as the compositions became ever larger, the "supports" went from boards to the walls of his rooms, to the extent that, finally, the studio itself became the support. Successive photographs of the studio allow us to follow the stages of various compositions; it is an engaging and challenging exercise for the reader to try to reconstruct the artist's reasons for substituting a leaf cut-out, say, for an amoeba, or trying to see why he finally came down against using any of the various "Blue Nudes" in "The Parakeet and the Mermaid" (1952). A fine touch is that the photographs are annotated with the corresponding catalogue numbers of the works in the exhibition; this greatly facilitates the reader's comparison and use of the book as a self-educational tool.As far as the catalogue is concerned, there are 136 plates of reproductions in excellent color (and, of course, riotous color: Picasso once claimed that only Matisse and Chagall knew what color really is). One very nice feature of the book is that the endpapers reproduce the color charts of the gouache paints produced by the manufacturer Linel, illustrating the great range of them available to Matisse, and of which he liberally availed himself: the technical analysis reveals that he used over fifteen varieties of orange, eight turquoises, and ten greens (255). No wonder the book is a carrousel of color! Most of the plates are printed full-page; for a couple of the longer works there are gatefolds, and "The Swimming Pool" itself has a double gatefold. This is altogether a very delightfully produced volume and unhurried in its design and layout. It has some selected bibliography, a checklist of the exhibited works with the usual curatorial data, and a comprehensive index. There is no dearth of books on Matisse, including on the cut-outs, but this seems to be the most complete and best illustrated one on these magnificent late works, and it's highly recommended for all Matisse aficionados.
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