Throughout the artist's life (1869-1954), drawing was a core discipline for Henri Matisse, for which he used a wide range of media (pencil, charcoal and stump, pen and ink, quill and brush ...) and supports (sheets from sketchpads, margins of letters, or fine art paper). This continuous practice in the privacy of his studio was the laboratory for his work as a painter and for his sculpture - Matisse often compared himself to a juggler or an acrobat, daily maintaining the flexibility of his instrument ... Read more
Throughout the artist's life (1869-1954), drawing was a core discipline for Henri Matisse, for which he used a wide range of media (pencil, charcoal and stump, pen and ink, quill and brush ...) and supports (sheets from sketchpads, margins of letters, or fine art paper). This continuous practice in the privacy of his studio was the laboratory for his work as a painter and for his sculpture - Matisse often compared himself to a juggler or an acrobat, daily maintaining the flexibility of his instrument of work. Matisse's drawings surround, precede, accompany and extend other artistic forms in his oeuvre and also reveal themselves as independent constellations. The exhibition illustrates the main moments in this artistic journey, arranged in fourteen thematic and chronological sequences: from the apprenticeship years at the very start of the 20th century, through to the studies for the chapel of the Rosary in Vence (1948-1949), the final masterpiece and culmination of an entire lifetime for Matisse. The suggested path identifies the pivotal points in Matisse's approach to drawing - from the black of ink or pencil to the modulated white of paper, from the softness of smudged shadows to the light emanating from the final brush drawings, in relation to his experiments with colour in his painting or his work on volume in his sculptures. In the exhibition, each room offers a dialogue between drawings and paintings, etchings and sculptures, with works echoing each other and restoring something of the atmosphere of his various studios: Quai Saint Michel, in Paris from 1894, Issy-les-Moulineaux from 1909, Nice from 1918 until his death in 1954, with the exception of 1943-1948 which Matisse spent in Vence. Close