LITTLE ROCK, ARK.- Riveras Paris is an exploration of the artists years spent in Europe, where Diego Rivera formed his ideas about art and the world that ultimately would propel him to become one of the most influential Mexican painters in the 20th century. The exhibition will be groundbreaking uniting paintings, drawings, and photographs for the first thorough examination of the years surrounding the creation of AMFA's masterpiece by Diego Rivera, Dos Mujeres (1914).
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This exhibition offers a unique glimpse into Riveras world, revealing the profound influence of the artists he encountered in Spain and France and his vibrant life in Paris, the art capital of the world. Riveras Paris offers deeper insight into Riveras artistic evolution and explores his distinctive approach to Cubism while examining the work of his contemporaries.
Dos Mujeres was gifted in 1955 to the Museum by Abby Rockefeller Mauzé, daughter of John D. Rockefeller, Jr., and sister to future Governor Winthrop Rockefeller. The painting was also the first artwork donated to the Museum by a member of the Rockefeller family, which prompted subsequent donations by David Rockefeller, Laurance S. Rockefeller, Winthrop and Jeannette Rockefeller, and collateral descendants.
Dos Mujeres is a double portrait of Riveras common-law wife, Angelina Beloff (standing), and their friend and fellow artist, Alma Dolores Bastián (nicknamed Moucha, seated), who together with her husband lived in the same building as Beloff and Rivera at 26, Rue du Départ. Rivera painted Dos Mujeres in 1914 in his apartment-studio, from which he stated one looked out on the vast sea of rooftopswith their squared and angular rhythm of wavesof nearby warehouses and workshops; the panes would rumblethe rumble of trainsfrom the Gare Montparnasse.
Riveras most important Cubist paintingand one of his largestDos Mujeres was first exhibited in 1914 at the Société des Artistes Indépendents. There, it received extensive coverage in the press, hailing Rivera as the Champion of Cubism.
AMFA has secured several key loans representing the full evolution of Riveras years in Europe, including an early landscape (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.); a Cubist portrait (Meadows Museum, SMU, Dallas); and several later drawings when Rivera returned to naturalism, as evidenced in his tender portrait of his wife, Angelina Beloff (1917, Museum of Modern Art, New York), who is one of the subjects depicted in Dos Mujeres. Additionally, major examples by artists who influenced Rivera: Darío de Regoyos y Valdés, whom Rivera praised as being a marvelous colorist (Meadows Museum, SMU, Dallas); a monumental painting by Hermenegildo Anglada Camarasa (The Hispanic Museum and Library, New York); Jean Metzinger, a vibrant portrait of the artist by Robert Delaunay (Museum of Fine Arts, Houston); and two works by Jacques Lipchitz (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.) who traveled to Spain with Rivera in 1914 to escape the war and later credited him with his own explorations of Cubism.
Riveras Paris is partially funded by the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts Foundation with additional support from the Robert Lehman Foundation.
This exhibition is organized by the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts.
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