Icare [Icarus] (from 'Jazz')
About this artwork
In 1942 the publisher, Elf Tériade, commissioned Matisse to make a book of colour images. Matisse conceived it as a book on the circus although began to incorporate other subjects and motifs. In 1944 he decided to include accompanying hand-written texts, which served to create breathing spaces between the vibrantly coloured images. The text offers a series of loosely connected thoughts on painting, life and the making of the book. Matisse’s nurse, Lydia Delectorskaya, noted Matisse’s description of the works to be included in the publication. For Matisse, this work relates to the Greek myth of Icarus who 'with a passionate heart falls out of the starry sky'. This may be in relation to Matisse’s concerns for his wife, daughter and son, who were involved with the Resistance.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Henri Matisse (1869 - 1954) French
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title:Icare [Icarus] (from 'Jazz')
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date created:1947
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materials:Pochoir print and lithographic text on paper
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measurements:42.00 x 65.50 cm (opened page size)
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased 1981
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accession number:GMA 2284.15
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gallery:
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depicted:
Henri Matisse
Henri Matisse
Matisse began taking drawing classes as a way of relieving the boredom of his job as a solicitor's clerk. However, in 1891 he abandoned his legal career in favour of painting, studying at various schools in Paris. In 1905 he exhibited with a number of artists who were dubbed by a critic, Les fauves...