| ABOUT US | ARCHIVES | LINKS | RSS FEED | MONDAYS | |

3quarksdaily

An Eclectic Digest of Science, Art and Literature

« Mill on the Floss | Main | Friday Poem »

August 08, 2008

all the colours of the rainbow are black

Clar05_3016_01

We know that Woman with a Hat was painted, at speed, towards the end of summer in 1905; a larger, more elaborate landscape painting, which Matisse had intended as the lynchpin of his exhibit at the Salon, had turned out to be unfinishable in the time remaining. Leo Stein said later that Matisse dared come only once to the Salon d’Automne to see his painting in situ, for fear of scoffers, and that Madame Matisse never came at all. Denis was not the only fellow-artist to join the hue and cry. The German painter Hans Purrmann, looking back later to his days as Matisse’s pupil and ally, tells the story of Matisse’s studio colleagues asking the painter ‘what kind of hat and what kind of dress were they that this woman had been wearing which were so incredibly loud in colour. And Matisse, exasperated, answered “Black, obviously”.’

It was a joke. But the joke was a good one; and therefore it concentrated an amount of conscious and unconscious thinking in a single reversal of terms. The joke set me thinking straight away of Baudelaire’s choice of black as the bourgeoisie’s prime colour, possessing its own ‘poetic beauty, which expresses the soul of the age; an immense cortège of professional mourners, politicians in mourning, lovers in mourning, bourgeois in mourning.

more from the LRB here.

Posted by Morgan Meis at 10:06 AM | Permalink

Comments

"Nothing could be more hardworking, more investigative and empirical, than the way her mouth is drawn."

Is the professor relying here upon the fabled "eye" of the art expert for this ludicrous claim? Defend Matisse by all means if you need to, but he's moving precisely away from empiricism. We are not dealing with the obviously chosen and legible departure from an accurate line or color note that a Degas or Ingres can give us, but a radical unconcern for representation that corresponds to its source. Show us the careful moves that took him from pictorial accuracy of the mouth to abstraction if they exist ...

Posted by: Jesse | Aug 9, 2008 9:53:04 AM

Post a comment






Subscribe to this blog's feed  

3QD Science Prize

Logo designed by Vicki Winters

Iran Twitter News

Andrew Covers Iran

The Lede on Iran

HuffPo Liveblogging

Help 3 Quarks Daily

3QD on Twitter

Search Using Lijit

Lijit Search

Bookmark This Page

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

3QD FEED FOR GOOGLE


Add to Google

3QD ADVERTISING


Compare prices

  • Canada (French)
  • Australia
  • New Zealand
  • South Africa
  • Brazil
  • Recent Comments

    Manas Shaikh on The Improbable American

    Jesse M. on Unconscious Choreography: Literally moving stories

    Jonathan on Mark Sanford and the Utility of Evolutionary Psychology

    Todd Shea on The Improbable American

    Louise Gordon on Robert Wright's The Evolution of God

    David Schneider on Money Talks Back: The Linguistic Infrastructure of Corporatese (i.e., business jargon)

    Jesse M. on The Godfather of American Liberalism

    DeGreg on Mark Sanford and the Utility of Evolutionary Psychology

    Vicki Baker on Mark Sanford and the Utility of Evolutionary Psychology

    gs on Money Talks Back: The Linguistic Infrastructure of Corporatese (i.e., business jargon)

    Louise Gordon on The Improbable American

    Phil Cantor on Mark Sanford and the Utility of Evolutionary Psychology

    Louise Gordon on The Improbable American

    Dave Ranning on Mark Sanford and the Utility of Evolutionary Psychology

    Rakin on Unconscious Choreography: Literally moving stories

    akatsuki on Stonewall at the White House: A Celebration with the Great Temporizer

    J. Hawkins on A priest, a rabbi, an imam, and a Buddhist monk walk into a game show...

    J. Hawkins on Stonewall at the White House: A Celebration with the Great Temporizer

    Carlos on A priest, a rabbi, an imam, and a Buddhist monk walk into a game show...

    dave on Mark Sanford and the Utility of Evolutionary Psychology

    Manas Shaikh on The Improbable American

    Andrea on Stamp Your Feet. Hard.

    Manas Shaikh on A priest, a rabbi, an imam, and a Buddhist monk walk into a game show...

    Elatia Harris on Stonewall at the White House: A Celebration with the Great Temporizer

    J. Hawkins on A priest, a rabbi, an imam, and a Buddhist monk walk into a game show...

    Acclaim For 3QD

    ------XXX------

    "I couldn't tear myself away from 3 Quarks Daily, to the point of neglecting my work. Congratulations on this superb site."—Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University.

    "I have placed 3 Quarks Daily at the head of my list of web bookmarks."—Richard Dawkins, Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University.

    "Just wanted you to know I’m one of many who reads and enjoys 3 Quarks....almost daily."—David Byrne, musician, former lead-singer of the Talking Heads, artist, intellectual.

    Subscribe to this blog's feed