The Dance by Henri Matisse – Canvas Giclée Print

$89.00$219.00

The high-resolution canvas revisits the masterpiece “The Dance” created in 1910 by Henri Matisse. As one of the French artist’s most significant paintings, it is part of the masterpiece series at Pigment Pool. The artwork marked both a key point of Matisse’s career and was decisive for the development of modern painting, embodying emancipation from Western art’s traditional conventions of representation.

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Henri Matisse was one of the key leaders of Fauvism, the early 20th-century avant-garde art movement. The Fauvist artists radically reinterpreted the use of colour as a structural and expressive element unrelated to the literal description. Matisse declared: “When I put down a green, it doesn‘t mean grass; and when I put down a blue, it doesn’t mean the sky.”

Where is the picture “The Dance” today?

The Matisse original of the picture “The Dance” (“La Danse”) is on permanent display as part of the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

What’s in it?

The painting shows five figures, painted in red-fleshy colours, dancing in a simplified green landscape with a deep blue background. All figures are drawn loosely and almost completely lack interior definition, while the rhythmical succession of the dancing nudes is reminiscent of hedonism and emotional liberation. Spacial ambiguity adds to the conflict between the illusion of depth and the acknowledgement of flatness characteristic for the style of Fauvism: The green in the background might be a hilltop the group is dancing on; it might just as well be a green field or island. The blue could be representing the sky, or it might be water moving back into the distance.

The characters dance in a circle, holding each other’s hands. Yet there is a break in the circle since the hands of the two front dancers are parted. Matisse allows this break only at the part of the composition, where the hands overlap with the knee of the dancer in the back, so as not to interrupt the continuity of colour.

What’s the context?

The artwork “The Dance” was commissioned with its matching painting “Music” by the influential Russian collector Sergei Shchukin in 1909, with whom Matisse had a long association. Shchukin decorated the staircase of his Moscow mansion with both paintings. However, when Matisse exhibited “Dance” in the art salons, his aesthetic choices caused a scandal. The bold representation of the nudes, the reduction to primary colours, and the strong colour contrasts made the artwork appear primitive and barbaric in character in the eyes of viewers and art critics. Shchukin on the contrary highly appreciated the rebellious quality of Matisse’s work, expressing his view in one of his letters to the artist: “I find your panel Dance of such nobility that I am resolved to brave our bourgeois opinion and to hang on my staircase a subject with nudes. At the same time, I must have a second panel, whose subject might very well be music.”

Chatter and Prattle

Henri Matisse – Facts:

  • Matisse’s paintings were strongly influenced by the experiences he gained during his time abroad. After his marriage with Amélie Paraye in 1898, he travelled for a year. While in London, he studied the works of the Romantic landscape painter M.W. Turner, known for his use of light and colour for creating atmosphere. Subsequently, he travelled to Corsica and the Côte d’Azur, where the primary colours he had been using in the style of Impressionism became brighter, inspired by the landscapes he encountered along the Mediterranean coast.
  • In April 1906 Matisse met the Catalan artist Pablo Picasso, who was eleven years his junior. They were to become a lifelong friend and artistic rival. Matisse humorously referred to their relationship as a “boxing match.”

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Recommended Readings:

This article may contain compensated links. Please read Disclaimer for more info. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Volkmar Essers (2016): Matisse (Basic Art Series 2.0)

Rene Percheron et al. (2004): Matisse: From Color to Architecture

Karen Butler et al. (2016): Matisse in the Barnes Foundation: 3 Vol. Set

John Cauman (2019): Matisse: In 50 Works

Hilary Spurling (2005): Matisse the Master: A Life of Henri Matisse: The Conquest of Colour: 1909-1954

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