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Painters in Paris: 18951950
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Nasturtiums with the Painting "Dance II", 1912.
Henri Matisse (French, 1869–1954).
Oil on canvas.
Bequest of Scofield Thayer, 1982 (1984.433.16).
©1999 Succession H. Matisse, Paris/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.


Divers (Blue and Black), 1942-43 (dated).
Fernand Léger (French, 1881–1955).
Oil on canvas.
Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection, 1998 ©2000 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris.
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More about This Exhibition
"Painters in Paris: 18951950," an exhibition of more than 100 paintings by many of the 20th century's most illustrious modern mastersBonnard, Braque, Chagall, Dubuffet, Léger, Matisse, Miró, Modigliani, Picasso, as well as otherswas on view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art from March 8, 2000 through January 14, 2001. Representing 36 painters of the School of Paris, including the Fauves, the Cubists, and the Surrealists, the exhibitiondrawn entirely from the Metropolitan's collectiontraced the development of painting in France from its Impressionist roots at the turn of the century through the aftermath of World War II.
"This astounding array of paintings by masters of the School of Paris reflects more than a half-century of collecting by the Metropolitan Museum," said Philippe de Montebello, Director of the Museum. "This collection has grown dramatically during the last two decades alone, as we have had the good fortune to gratefully accept a number of extraordinarily generous gifts and bequests."
Commented William S. Lieberman, the Museum's Jacques and Natasha Gelman Chairman of the Modern Art Department and curator of the exhibition: "This is the first such survey of masterworks from our collection, and it will be revelatory for our visitors. Not only will it recall a period and place of great vitality but it will also reveal unexpected relationships between the artists who so profoundly shaped the art of this century."
The exhibition was sponsored by Aetna.
More about the objects on view

More about Fauvism

More about Cubism

More about Surrealism

Exhibition Publication

Educational Programs

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More about the objects on view
"Painters in Paris: 18951950" contained acquisitions made between 1947 and 1999, including the notable bequests of Miss Adelaide Milton de Groot (1967), Scofield Thayer (1982), Florene M. Schoenborn (1995), and Jacques and Natasha Gelman (1998); and distinguished gifts, including the Alfred Stieglitz Collection (1949), the Mr. and Mrs. Klaus G. Perls Collection (199798), and many others. The first School of Paris painting to enter the Museum's collection was Picasso's portrait Gertrude Stein (1906), bequeathed by the picture's subject.
"Painters in Paris: 18951950" was installed in chronological fashion, allowing for juxtapositions of subject matter and aesthetic affinities between different artists. It began with Pierre Bonnard's "The Children's Meal" of 1895 and paintings by Maurice Denis and Edouard Vuillard, although their predecessor Claude Monet was represented by a later example"Reflections, the Water Lily Pond at Giverny" (ca. 1920). The exhibition concluded with works of the 1940s, late paintings by Georges Braque, Jean Hélion, and Fernand Léger, and three early paintings by Jean Dubuffet. Balthus, who was represented by four paintings, was the only featured artist aside from Hélion and Dubuffet born after 1900, and the only living artist included.
The exhibition was curated by William S. Lieberman with the assistance of Anne L. Strauss, Research Associate, of the Metropolitan Museum's Department of Modern Art. Exhibition design was by Daniel Bradley Kershaw, Exhibition Designer of the Museum's Design Department.
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More about Fauvism
In the decades following Paris's Great World Exhibition of 1900, which brought worldwide fame to the Impressionists and Post-Impressionists, France was host to an influx of artists of varying nationalitiesincluding Bulgarian, Czech, French, German, Italian, Lithuanian, Mexican, Russian, Spanish, and Swissand Paris was central to the development of modern art. The painters who developed a new style of painting in reaction against Impressionism, and who exhibited together at the Autumn Salon of 1905, became known as les fauves, or 'wild beasts.' With Henri Matisse as one of their major figures, they used vivid colors for emotional and decorative effect, and Fauvism became the first of the major avant-garde developments in European art between the turn of the century and the First World War.
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More about Cubism
The Cubist movement, which originated with Pablo Picasso (represented in the exhibition with 23 works) and Georges Braque around 1909, is recognized as one of the great turning points in Western art. Cubism possessed a stylistic cohesion that set it apart from Fauvism. In analyzing the forms of objects into geometrical planes and recomposing them from various simultaneous points of view, its practitionersJuan Gris, Fernand Léger, Roger de La Fresnaye, and otherscreated three-dimensional representational forms in a two-dimensional plane. Picasso and his colleagues painted images of poets, writers, musicians, harlequins, and women, as well as still-life compositions with recurring guitars, violins, wine bottles, pipes, cigarettes, playing cards, and newspapersall iconographical accoutrements of the bohemian studio-and-café lifestyle in Paris.
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More about Surrealism
Surrealisma movement that sprang from the anti-rationalist philosophies in art after World War I and had among its precursors Marc Chagall and Giorgio de Chiricoflourished in art and literature during the 1920s and '30s. Characterized by a fascination with the bizarre, the incongruous, and the irrational, it was conceived as a revolutionary alternative approach to the formalism of Cubism and other forms of abstract art.
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Exhibition Publication
"Painters in Paris: 18951950" was accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue by William S. Lieberman. Published by The Metropolitan Museum of Art and distributed by Harry N. Abrams, Inc., it is available in a paperback edition in the Metropolitan Museum bookshop and the online Met Store.
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Educational Programs
A number of educational programs were offered in conjunction with the exhibition, including lectures, feature and documentary films, gallery talks, and programs for students and teachers.
An audio tour, part of the Metropolitan's new Key to the Met Audio Guide, was available for rental at the entrance to the exhibition.
The Key to the Met Audio Guide program was sponsored by Bloomberg News.
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