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Monday, March 31, 2025 |
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The Pierre and Maria-Gaetana Matisse Collection in Málaga |
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Joan Miró, Painting, 1927. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Nueva York. Gift of Pierre Matisse in memory of Pierre Loeb, 1984 (1984.207). © Successió Miró 2007
Photograph © 1984 The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
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MÁLAGA, SPAIN.- The Museo Picasso Málaga is presenting the exhibition The Pierre and Maria-Gaetana Matisse Collection from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, comprising a selection of the unique and heterogeneous collection of one of New Yorks leading art dealers of the last century. Balthus, Carrington, Chagall, Delvaux, Dubuffet, Giacometti, Lam, Magritte, Matta, Miró and in particular Henri Matisse the dealers father are among the great names of 20th-century art represented in the fifty works that make up the exhibition, on display in Malaga through 24 June.
When Pierre Matisses ship docked at New Yorks harbour in December 1924, he had arrived in a city that looked towards Europe for cultural leadership. When he closed his gallery door for the last time, it was in a city that was now watched by the rest of the world for cultural direction. With these words, art historian Jonathan Pratt opens his text in the catalogue that accompanies this exhibition. Pierre Matisse was born in 1900, youngest son of Henri Matisse. Like his brothers he embarked on an artistic education and received classes from André Derain. Nonetheless, the level of fame that he acquired in the art world was not due to his talents as a painter which he is said to have had but rather to his activities as an art dealer.
At the age of 24, Pierre Matisse moved to New York where he began to collaborate with Valentine Dudensings gallery. In 1931, at the height of the Depression, he opened his own space in the Fuller Building in Manhattan. Matisses gallery would soon become a pioneer in promoting European avant-garde art in the United States. His remarkably active and wide-ranging career spanning nearly sixty years consolidated the appreciation of contemporary art among the American public and was also crucial for the careers of now legendary artists such as Balthus, Miró, Giacometti and Dubuffet.
To survey the roll-call of names that Matisse represented in his gallery is to survey much of the history of modern art. For these artists, however, Pierre Matisse was more than a dealer: he was a personal friend to many of them and collected their art as well as works by already established names, including his own father Henri Matisse. The choice of artists in his gallery responded both to aesthetic and theoretical criteria, as well as to the close contact between dealer and artist, either the result of a direct relationship or of one artist recommending another. Pierre Matisses relationships with his artists went beyond mere professional association. In Mirós words, painted with bold brushstrokes on an old palette: to Pierre Matisse, fellow traveller.
In addition, Pierre Matisses activities as an intermediary mean that most leading American museums now have works acquired from his gallery. Major private collectors such as Nelson Rockefeller and Chester Dale also purchased works from him and took his advice on acquisitions.
The activities of the Pierre Matisse Gallery only came to an end with the death of its founder in 1989. In 1995 his widow created the Pierre and Maria-Gaetana Matisse Foundation, which in 2002 donated part of its outstanding art collection to The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
The selection of works to be shown at the MPM will offer the visitor a vision of European art of the first half of the 20th century, the artistic and historical context in which Picasso also created much of his work. The fifty works to be exhibited created between 1903 and 1963 will thus provide the public with the chance to appreciate the genius of these celebrated artists, while also proposing a different way of looking at the work of Picasso.
Visitors will be able to compare Mirós lyrical abstractions with Balthuss cool realism, and Dubuffets unique sense of humour with the sombre poetry of Giacomettis figures. Particularly notable in the exhibition is the group of 24 works by Henri Matisse, possibly the artist whom Picasso most respected among his contemporaries. This group runs from early sculptures to works of the artists mature period, and covers his most typical subjects: penetrating and realistic portraits of models, friends and family members, some distant in mood, others warm and intimate.
The MPM is publishing an accompanying catalogue of the exhibition with texts in Spanish and English by the art historians Pierre Schneider and Jonathan Pratt. It includes entries and colour reproductions of all the works included in the exhibition.
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