BARCELONA.- This, the first anthology exhibition in Spain of the work of Kees van Dongen (Rotterdam, 1877 Monte Carlo, 1968), sets out to reveal the importance of a painter who deserves to be far better known in this country.
Organized by the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montreal, the Nouveau Musée National de Monaco and the
Museu Picasso in Barcelona, and curated by Jean-Michel Bouhours, the exhibition will bring together almost 100 works by Kees Van Dongen, and will also include a number of works by Picasso, bearing witness to the friendship between the two artists.
The exhibition, which brings together some 100 works, including over a hundred paintings, forty rare drawings, prints and other archival documents and photographs as well as for the first time, a dozen Fauvist ceramics, will illustrate the influential role Van Dongen played in the early twentieth century as the only portraitist among the Fauves.
His dazzling, shameless paintings, described as "riots of light, heat and colour," attest to his distinctive style within modern art alongside his contemporaries Matisse and Picasso. His caustic, urban, scandalous art is very different from the landscape Fauvism that is generally associated with this movement. In light of new research and previously little-known works, the artist's career will be traced from his early days in Holland to the time he settled in Paris and participated in the illustrious Salon d'Automne of 1905, which established Fauvism as a new style in modern art. Arresting paintings of nudes and coquettish female figures that nevertheless retain the sumptuous palette and rich impasto of his Fauvist works will be examined through the themes of exoticism, spectacle and Orientalism. During the 1920s, Van Dongen frequented high society, which earned him commissions for portraits of the most celebrated personalities of the era. An impressive selection of these major portraits from the Roaring Twenties and a series of landscapes in saturated colours will illustrate the artist's mature period.
Major Works
The exhibition will present, for the first time, the outstanding collection of works by Van Dongen recently acquired by the Nouveau Musée national de Monaco, including the magisterial Spotted Chimera (1895-1907) and the Tabarin Wrestlers (1907-1908), an astonishing canvas that has not been exhibited for over fifty years, and Tango of the Archangel (1922-1935). The Musée national d'art modern, the Centre Pompidou and the Musée d'art modern de la Ville de Paris have granted many outstanding loans for the exhibition, including the famous Tableau that created a scandal in 1913 and the Self-portrait as Neptune (1922). Many major loans have also been received from public and private collections in Europe and elsewhere, including a number of important works from the Nahmad family.
The Exhibition Themes
The themes of the exhibition will introduce visitors to Van Dongen's rich and varied oeuvres as they follow his career from Rotterdam to Paris, where he was an active player in the avant-garde scene of the early twentieth century. From North to South, from Symbolism to Neo-impressionism (1885-1904) presents early works executed in Holland, which reflect Van Dongen's inspiration, which ranged from Rembrandt to the Neo-Impressionists; Van Dongen Illustrator (1895-1904) reveals the key role his graphic work played in his art, which was defended by Van Dongen's first, most influential supporter, art critic Félix Fénéon; Van Dongen Fauve (1904-1912) shows his style evolving under the influence of artists of the avant-garde like Matisse and Picasso, as well as how he became notorious after his participation in the Salon d'Automne in 1905, and his growing interest in portraiture, the worlds of the cabaret and the circus and his obsession with women; Exoticism and Orientalism (1910-1917) reveals how his trips to Spain, Morocco and Egypt inspired him to create new harmonies of colors and to explore a new purity of line; The Artist's Studio: A Social Venue (1914-1930). During this period the now famous Van Dongen frequented Paris high society and painted a gallery of portraits that represent a chronicle of the Roaring Twenties; and Landscapes (the 1950s) the final section, presents works, as well as archival documents and photographs, that show the artist revisiting the themes and styles that characterized his early years.