Rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture.
Thursday, May 3, 2018
Chaim Soutine: Flesh
"Carcass of Beef" by Chaim Soutine (Albright-Knox)
“Chaim Soutine: Flesh,” as blunt and emphatic as it might
seem, is an elegant title for the current Jewish Museum Exhibit. Soutine
remarked, “They say Courbet could give in his nudes all the character of Paris.
I want to show all that is Paris in the carcass of an ox.” And that is what the Lithuanian Jewish immigrant, who studied art in Vilnius, proceeded to do in paintings with names like “The Donkey” ((1934), “Plucked Goose”
(1933), “The Bull” (1940) and “Sheep Behind Fence” (1940). “Still Life with Rayfish” (1929) was based on a painting by Jean-Simeon Chardin (1725-6) and he paid homage to
Rembrandt’s “Flayed Ox”(1655) in his own "Carcass of Beef" (1925)--as would, by the way, Francis Bacon in his "Figure with Meat" (1954). The curators remark, “Chaim Soutine
still lifes embrace the modernist notion of gesture. Material and color are as
much a subject of the art as the objects depicted.” His expressionistic work
hovers on the edge of abstraction just in the way it does with nineteenth
century painters like Van Gogh, but the intensityof the brushwork recalls the fauvist
esthetic. Remember the fauves were referred to as wild beasts? Stendhal famously wrote The Charterhouse of Parma.But Soutine, who legendarily found his subjects in abbatoirs, might have
written a novel entitled The
Slaughterhouse of Paris.
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