Henri Matisse Gallery
Carmelina, 1903
Oil on canvas
32 x 23 1/4 in. (81.3 x 59.0 cm)
Tompkins Collection, 1932 Res. 32.14
 
 
“What interests me most,” Matisse wrote, “is neither still life nor landscape but the human figure. It is through it that I best succeed in expressing the nearly religious feeling that I have towards life.” Here, in a rigorously balanced composition, the curves of the model’s body are accentuated by the interlocking rectangles of the background, where the artist and his model are reflected in a mirror. Matisse declared that “the whole arrangement of my pictures is expressive. The place occupied by figures or objects, the empty spaces around them, the proportions, everything plays a part.” In this early work, Matisse is already a master of color, playing off vibrating reds and blues against the blocks of warm earth tones representing furniture, walls, picture frames, and blank canvases.

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Bathers by a River
Italian Woman
Dance
Promenade among the Olives
Butterfly Net
Carmelina
Abduction of Europa
Seance du Matin

Biography


Bulletin Board


Renowned Art
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Henri Matisse (1869-1954)
Matisse was the leader of the Fauvist (meaning Wild Beasts) Movement, a painting style which focused on pure colors used in an aggressive and direct manner. His style changed many times over the years, but he never gave up his art. Matisse continued creating even into his 80's, when cancer had taken over his body. This was the time when he created the papercuttings that he is perhaps best known for. Matisse understood perfectly the relationship between color and shape, a talent which rightfully earned him the name "Master of Color."
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