Jean Miotte returns to Shanghai: Art Informel master's solo show marks historic legacy
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Monday, March 3, 2025


Jean Miotte returns to Shanghai: Art Informel master's solo show marks historic legacy
Jean Miotte Untitled, 1980. Acrylic on canvas, 89.2 x 116.5 x 2.7 cm. 35 x 46 x 1 in (unframed), 94 x 121 x 4.6 cm. 37 x 47 1/2 x 2 in (framed).



SHANGHAI.- Almine Rech Shanghai is presenting Jean Miotte's second solo exhibition with the gallery, on view from January 10 to March 15, 2025. In 1980, Miotte was the first Western painter to be invited to show his work after Mao’s regime.

Painting is a gesture from within

Almine Rech Shanghai presents twelve paintings by French artist Jean Miotte (1926-2016), one of the masters of Art Informel. Miotte always refused to be associated with any particular school—conveniently forgetting that his work was shown in the “Informel” section at the first Paris Biennial in 1959. He expressed a personal lyricism that found its source in the energy of unresolved gestures something that differentiates him from other abstract painters of his time.


Jean Miotte Untitled, 1995. Acrylic aerosol on canvas, 97 x 130 x 3 cm. 38 x 51 x 1 in (unframed), 101.5 x 134.5 x 4.6 cm. 40 x 53 x 2 in (framed)


His artistic impulse contained an inherent anxiety from the acknowledged risk of avoiding the pitfalls of triviality and indulgence. He had to face the possible failure of achieving a painting whose difficulties he strove to resolve through pictorial developments.

Jean Miotte’s art is demanding. He made art from a need to paint and his lack of training (except for his occasional time spent in the open art academies of Montparnasse) did not deter him. Miotte wanted to create images where “the tension toward form is a sign.” His fleeting influences (Matisse, Robert Delaunay, artists of the Quattrocento discovered during a trip to Italy, and Flemish painters) became part of his image-producing imagination in his own personal artistic journey.


Jean Miotte Insurrection, 1996. Acrylic on canvas, 300 x 500 cm. 118 x 197 in


Miotte’s unique style could be described as insolite (meaning “out of the ordinary or quirky”) from the title of a painting from 1949, and it stems from his deceptively varied artistic approaches. This is one reason that his work was not understood amid the dominance of the Nouvelle École de Paris. Miotte spent part of each year in New York, where he first went in 1961 after receiving the Ford Foundation Prize. He also established friendships with American artists in France in the 1960s, particularly with Sam Francis, whose luminist concerns he shared, and also with Riopelle and Joan Mitchell. For these reasons, his approach was misunderstood and his work was incorrectly equated with New York expressionism. Despite this misunderstood opposition between the École de Paris and the New York movement, as of the late 1960s informed French critics such as Alain Jouffroy, Marcelin Pleynet, and Jean Clarence Lambert recognized Miotte as an abstract painter involved in transmutation according to the principle of a mental composition of the image. This image referred to no model outside the specific language of his painting. Miotte’s travels to China and Japan did not interfere with his personal stylistic approach. While some experiments brought him close to Asian painting, his painting had nothing calligraphic about it.


Jean Miotte Untitled, 1960. Oil on canvas, 193.5 x 128.5 x 3.5 cm. 76 x 50 1/2 x 1 1/2 in (unframed), 198 x 133 x 4.6 cm. 78 x 52 1/2 x 2 in (framed)


Gesture was primary, as the expression of an existential experience. It led him to a lyricism that was inseparable from a philosophical and spiritual lived experience and from a musical and choreographic world that was familiar to the artist. The creation of arcane signs and their thought-out rhythm called for the simultaneous use of the brush, the palette knife, and the painting knife. The evocative power of a world determined by opposing forces underpins what is truly a metaphysics of the image. Through the vitality, transparency, and richness of the paint, the visual field developed the personal value of the colors within a palette emphasizing white.

Thus the visual space is inseparable from color in Miotte’s work.

Miotte was a born colorist. He used color according to a personal perception that absorbed a whole range of emotions whose unifying movement he constantly questioned. He questioned color in its sounds, with its most vibrant accents divided by spatial fragmentation. The 1970s and early 1980s were conducive to an explosion of forms that renewed his vocabulary with dynamic, joyful colors. Winding shapes and arabesques recall Miotte’s enduring interest in choreography.


Jean Miotte, Untitled, 2000s. Acrylic on canvas, 162 x 130.2 x 2.5 cm. 64 x 51 x 1 in (unframed), 166.5 x 134.5 x 4.6 cm. 65 1/2 x 53 x 2 in (framed)


In the late 1980s, he created a cycle aiming for the synthesis of a perfectly identifiable language. This expression was intended to unite his thought and sensation, a spontaneity born of elegance and refinement that were very French.

Jean Miotte’s style transcends the life of forms in a metamorphosis combining grandeur and intimacy, seriousness and exuberance.


Installation view of Jean Miotte's solo exhibition 'Return to China', Almine Rech Shanghai, on view from January 10 to March 16, 2025. Photo: Alessandro Wang.


With color the seduction is complete. It erases any concern. It makes us complicit in the work by opening a dialogue that can no longer be interrupted.

— Lydia Harambourg, historian, writer, art critic, Correspondent Member of the Institut de France, Académie des beaux-arts










Today's News

March 3, 2025

The Met opens the most comprehensive exhibition of Chinese bronze art from the 12th to the 19th century

Arms Around The Child present solo exhibition of paintings by Pie Herring at CasildArt Contemporary

The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth presents Alex Da Corte: The Whale

Jean Miotte returns to Shanghai: Art Informel master's solo show marks historic legacy

Karel Appel's "Classic Themes" exhibition redefines Post-CoBrA legacy

Luxembourg + Co. opens 'Drawing on Matisse', an exhibition organised together with Sylvie Fleury

Capitain Petzel opens Altri Fiori, Isabella Ducrot's third solo exhibition with the gallery

The Denver Art Museum hosts South Korean national treasures in 'Lunar Phases: Korean Moon Jars'

Sophie Calle reconsiders abandoned projects and creates photographs of hidden artworks

"Place Revisited" explores time and technique: Five painters unite at Modern Art Helmet Row

Denis Piel's retrospective at Staley-Wise Gallery showcases sensuality and sustainability

From objects of desire to red veils: Sarah Charlesworth's recurring motifs on display

Pop icons exhibit celebrates iconic artists and cultural movements

Matthew Lutton OAM appointed as Artistic Director of the Adelaide Festival

Joan Jonas' "Empty Rooms": Sculpture, video, and memory intertwine in New York exhibition

Group show celebrates hope and mourns loss at Klaus von Nichtssagend

Bremen show features sculptural paintings by Monique S. Desto and Klaartje van Essen

Katja Mater reimagines time: FOMU exhibition unveils hidden stories in photography collection

AdE's "FREAK YOU!" explores erotic mythology and future beasts

Gladstone now representing Brook Hsu

Participants in SITE Santa Fe's 12th International

Moderna galerija presents its 2025 exhibition highlights




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful