The Age of Picasso & Matisse: Modern Masters from the Art Institute of Chicago
The
Age of Picasso & Matisse: Modern Masters from the Art Institute of Chicago has opened to immense traffic and formidable popular acclaim at the Kimbell
Art Museum in Fort
Worth (Texas ).
The unique lending of works from the Art Institute of Chicago contains nearly
100 gems from groundbreaking European artists of the 20th century. (Pictured: Juan Gris' vision of Picasso [left] and Picasso's Old Guitarist.)
The
exhibition will coincide in November with the opening of the Kimbell’s Renzo
Piano Pavilion. The collection with remain on view through Feb. 16, 2014.
Whether
or not one is familiar with the selections as mainstays of the Art Institute,
the new setting casts everything in a striking new light. The very walls of the
Kimbell lend an unaccustomed depth, and the ebb and flow of natural light assures a
new view on every visit. Multiple visits might as well be necessary, the better to derive
the deepest and most pleasurable impressions.
The
Art Institute will regather its masterworks upon the completion of gallery
renovations in Chicago. The loan to the Kimbell is at once practical and generous.
The
groundwork had been laid with the Kimbell’s 2008 exhibition of Impressionist
masterworks from the Art Institute. The Age of Picasso & Matisse relates a vivid account of European art
during the first half of the last century – a period of intense experimentation
and fusion of varied concepts.
Pablo
Picasso and Henri Matisse are the pivotal figures – friends and rivals of
immeasurable influence. Each is represented by 10 works. Picasso’s Old Guitarist
(1901) opens the procession of unbridled creativity. His immense Nude under
a Pine Tree (1959) marks the close
of the circuit.
The Art
Institute’s signature Bathers by a River, one of Matisse’s most important
large-scale paintings, is displayed alongside works from virtually every stage of
his career. Bathers by a River represents Matisse’s most emphatic response
to the revolutionary language of Cubism, as invented by Picasso, Georges Braque,
Fernand Léger, and Juan Gris around 1910.
On the Web: www.kimbellart.org
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