Georges Braque
Grand Nu, 1907 – 1908 / 140 x 100 cm
Paris, Centre Pompidou, Musée national d’art moderne
gift Alex Maguy-Glass, 2002
© Centre Pompidou, MNAM-CCI, Grand Palais / Philippe Migeat
© Adagp, Paris 2013
Georges Braque
Le Port, 1909 / 40,6 x 48,2 cm
Washington, National Gallery of Art, gift of Victoria Nebecker Coberly in memory of her son, John W. Mudd
© National Gallery of art, Washington
© Adagp, Paris 2013
Georges Braque retrospective at Grand Palais Paris The Grand Palais in Paris is hosting an ambitious retrospective of Georges Braque (1882-1963), one of the twentieth century’s major artists. 18 September 2013 – 6 January 2014.]]>
Source: Grand Palais, Paris
Georges Braque (1882-1963) was a painter, engraver and sculptor, but first, as the founder of cubism and the inventor of pasted papers, one of the leading figures in the avant-garde of the early twentieth century before focusing definitively on methodical, serial exploration of still life and landscape painting, which made him the French painter par excellence, the heir to Corot and Chardin and the depository of the classical tradition as well as the precursor of post-war abstraction.
The retrospective at the Grand Palais presents all the periods in his art from Fauvism to his last works, culminating in the dazzling series of large studios and birds. The exhibition’s chronological design insists on the highlights of his career, such as cubism, the canephors of the twenties, or the last landscapes, which so appealed to Nicolas de Staël.
Thanks to the support of the Musée national d’art moderne and major international collections, it gathers the artist’s key works and series exploring various themes – landscapes, gueridons, canephors and the complete cycle of the nine Studios (1949-1956) shown for the first time in a single exhibition – which amplify and sum up his experimental work.
Five display cases filled with often unpublished works, documents and photographs (by Man Ray and Cartier-Bresson among others) explore other perspectives: his collaboration with Pablo Picasso in cubism; the resonance between his art and music and his closeness to Erik Satie; and his affinity with poets such as Pierre Reverdy, Francis Ponge and René Char and important intellectual figures of his time such as Carl Einstein or Jean Paulhan.
No full retrospective of Georges Braque’s oeuvre has been presented in Paris since the major show at the Orangerie des Tuileries in 1973-1974.
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