Sunday, 9 July 2023

Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris


I had made my first visit to Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, many, many years ago and in the intervening years had neglected to return, instead on limited itineraries choosing to visit the blockbuster art exhibitions at other institutions that Paris does so well each year. On my last Paris visit in November of last year though, I was drawn to return not by the large Oskar Kokoschka retrospective the Musée d'Art Moderne was staging, but to see a display of a generous gift to the museum by the Anni and Josef Albers Foundation of the two artists works which I've posted previously (here). The museum is a wonderful example of 1930s Deco architecture housed in the eastern wing of the Palais de Tokyo complex and was constructed for the International Exhibition of Arts and Technology of 1937. The museum houses a collection of 15000 works dedicated to modern and contemporary art of the 20th and 21st centuries. The first artwork encountered is La Feé - the massive 600m squared mural by Raoul Dufy commissioned for the opening of the the building in the Pavilion of Light and Electricity in 1937. It is an immersive piece of art which envelopes the viewer telling the story of the Electricity Fairy. The lower half contains portraits of of over 100 scientists and inventors who contributed to the development of electricity, and the upper half contains allegorical figures and some of Dufy's favoured motifs. It is an impressively colourful work comprising all the colours of the spectrum. Other large scale works on display nearby include the Dance murals of master Henri Matisse. Originally commissioned by American collector Dr Albert C. Barnes for his foundation in Philadelphia, the first attempt was considered to be too decorative. The dimensions of the second attempt at the mural were wrong. These two works are displayed here and a third successful mural was delivered to the Barnes Foundation. Other large, impressive murals featuring their signature concentric circles by Sonia and Robert Delaunay can be found further into the museum. Below are a selection of the artworks which were on display on my visit which caught my eye. Now that my acquaintance with the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris has been rekindled I hope it won't be too long before a return visit can be scheduled.



Raoul Dufy - La Fée Electricité, 1937






Henri Matisse - La Danse inachevée (‘The Uncompleted Dance’), 1931

Henri Matisse - Nu de dos troisième état, vers 1913-1916

Henri Matisse - La Danse de Paris, 1931-1933


Jean Degottex - ETC IV, 30. 3. 1967

Zao Wou-Ki - Six Janvier, 1968

Karel Appel - Oiseaux de Nuit, 1949

Bernard Buffet - Portrait de l'artiste, 1949

Bernard Buffet - Nature morte au revolver, 1949

Fernand Léger - Les Disques, 1918

Georges Braque - Composition à la guitare, vers 1918-1919

Jacques Lipchitz - Personnage assis jouant de la clarinette II, 1920

Georges Valmier - La Fillette au piano, 1920

Andre Dérain - Baigneuses, vers 1908

Georges Braque - Nature Morte à la pipe, 1914

Roger de La Fresanaye - Nature Morte aux trois anses, 1912

Pablo Picasso - Le Fou, 1905

Georges Rouault - Vase, 1907-1919

Robert Delaunay - Paysage aux vaches, 1906

Andre Dérain - Trois personnages assis dans l'herbe, 1906

Albert Marquet - Notre Dame de Paris sous la neige, vers 1912

Marie Laurencin - Portrait de l'artiste, 1904

Lucio Fontano - Neon Structure for the Milan Triennale, 1951


Marc Chagall - Le Rêve, 1927

Amedeo Modigliani - Femme aux yeux bleu, vers 1918

Chaim Soutine - Grotesque, 1922-1925

Chaim Soutine - La Femme en Rouge, vers 1923-1924

Wilferdo Lam - L'indésirable, 1962

Giorgio de Chirico - Mélancolie hermétique, 1919

Pierre Bonnard - Femme à sa toilette, vers 1934

Pierre Bonnard - Nu dans la bain, 1936

Pierre Bonnard - Le Jardin, vers 1936

Jean Dunand - Les Vendages, 1935

Robert Delaunay - L'Equipe de Cardiff, 1912-1913

Robert Delaunay - Symphonie colorée, 1915-1917

Robert Delaunay - Tour Eiffel, 1926

Albert Gleizes - Composition, 1930-1931

Robert Delaunay - Rhythme No.1, décoration pour le salon des Tuileries, 1938

Robert Delaunay - Rhythme No.3, 1938

Sonia Delaunay Turk - Rhythme décoration pour le salon des Tuileries, Disques, 1938

Robert Delaunay - Rhythme No.2, décoration pour le salon des Tuileries, 1938










Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris
11 Avenue du Président Wilson
75116
Paris
France

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