Simon Hantaï. Azzurro
From 02 Febbraio 2024 to 30 Marzo 2024
Rome
Place: Gagosian Gallery
Address: Via Francesco Crispi 16
Times: Tuesday–Saturday 10:30am–7pm
Telefono per informazioni: +39 06 4208 6498
E-Mail info: rome@gagosian.com
Official site: http://gagosian.com
The function of color is essentially linked to light, not to matter.
—Simon Hantaï
Gagosian is pleased to announce Azzurro, an exhibition of paintings by Simon Hantaï (1922–2008) in Rome. Curated by Anne Baldassari, it focuses on the significance of blue in the artist’s practice, illuminating his affinity with Italy and the influence on his work of its classical painting tradition. Azzurro follows a major retrospective, Simon Hantaï. The Centenary Exhibition, at Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris (2022). It also forms part of a sequence with Gagosian’s two previous Hantaï exhibitions, LES NOIRS DU BLANC, LES BLANCS DU NOIR at Le Bourget in 2019–20, which featured black-and-white works, and Les blancs de la couleur, la couleur du blanc at 980 Madison Avenue, New York, in 2022, which emphasized combinations of primary and secondary colors.
Born in Bia, Hungary, Hantaï moved to Paris in 1948 and joined André Breton’s Surrealists, breaking with the group in 1955. Subsequently, he originated the pliage (folding) technique, in which a canvas is crumpled and knotted, painted over, and then spread out to reveal alternations between pigment and ground. After representing France at the 1982 Biennale di Venezia, Hantaï withdrew from public life, declining to exhibit new work until 1998. Following this extended isolation, he began altering a set of pliage paintings that he had shown in 1981, photographing them at an angle and producing prints from the distorted images. He continued to work largely in isolation until his death in 2008.
It is significant that Azzurro takes place in Rome; Hantaï made his first trip to Italy in 1942 with fellow students from the Academy of Fine Art in Budapest, spending time in the capital, Florence, and Siena. In 1948, while traveling on foot from Ravenna to Rome, he visited the 24th Biennale di Venezia, where he explored the work of Max Ernst and Jackson Pollock. He returned to the country for a final time in 1982. These tours cemented his admiration for Italian painters of the proto- and early Renaissance, especially Giotto and Masaccio.
Azzurro is a chromatically focused retrospective that presents examples of Hantaï’s distinctive pliage works in a chronological sequence. The exhibition starts with the early canvas Peinture (Petit Nu) (1949), which depicts a figure against an intense turquoise background reminiscent of Renaissance frescoes. This is followed by Catamurons (1964), with its folded center and multiple color layers; Meun (1967), which incorporates unpainted sections in its corner areas; Étude (1969), in which uniformly folded canvas painted monochrome blue is juxtaposed with large irregular shards of white; and Blancs (1974), in which colorless passages occupy more space on the canvas than accompanying fragments of blue, green, and black.
The centerpiece of the exhibition is an array of large-scale blue Tabulapaintings (1972–76; 1980–82) that dominate the gallery’s ovoid main room. The monumental scale of these works reveals each square as the result of a unique, autonomous fold; the paintings also evoke the artist’s childhood memories of his mother’s aprons, the rolling and folding of which produced sequences of luminous color. Prioritizing touch over vision, Hantaï also imbued the Tabula works with references to historical artists including Matisse and Cezanne and, in their fusion of discipline and accident, to mathematical theory. The rarely seen “last studio” works (1982–85) in the final room feature unprecedented forms derived from folding and dripping, executed in balanced, vibrant color.
A further key inspiration for the artist was Pablo Picasso’s Blue Period (1901–04). “For Hantaï,” writes Baldassari, “the same pictorial spirituality linked the Blue Period to the altarpieces and frescoes of Giotto, Masaccio, Piero della Francesca, and Fra Angelico. Color was the link.” He was also captivated by the centrality of the color to the Catholic Marian cult, as seen in the painting Le Manteau de la Vierge (1960), which remains in the collection of the Vatican Museums. “From 1960,” Baldassari recounts, “with the conceptualization of ‘folding as method,’ the semantic association between mother’s apron, blue, and folding became a structural element in Hantaï’s painting. It forms the signifying syntagm at the heart of his practice.”
Azzurro is accompanied by a catalogue with an essay by Anne Baldassari.
—Simon Hantaï
Gagosian is pleased to announce Azzurro, an exhibition of paintings by Simon Hantaï (1922–2008) in Rome. Curated by Anne Baldassari, it focuses on the significance of blue in the artist’s practice, illuminating his affinity with Italy and the influence on his work of its classical painting tradition. Azzurro follows a major retrospective, Simon Hantaï. The Centenary Exhibition, at Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris (2022). It also forms part of a sequence with Gagosian’s two previous Hantaï exhibitions, LES NOIRS DU BLANC, LES BLANCS DU NOIR at Le Bourget in 2019–20, which featured black-and-white works, and Les blancs de la couleur, la couleur du blanc at 980 Madison Avenue, New York, in 2022, which emphasized combinations of primary and secondary colors.
Born in Bia, Hungary, Hantaï moved to Paris in 1948 and joined André Breton’s Surrealists, breaking with the group in 1955. Subsequently, he originated the pliage (folding) technique, in which a canvas is crumpled and knotted, painted over, and then spread out to reveal alternations between pigment and ground. After representing France at the 1982 Biennale di Venezia, Hantaï withdrew from public life, declining to exhibit new work until 1998. Following this extended isolation, he began altering a set of pliage paintings that he had shown in 1981, photographing them at an angle and producing prints from the distorted images. He continued to work largely in isolation until his death in 2008.
It is significant that Azzurro takes place in Rome; Hantaï made his first trip to Italy in 1942 with fellow students from the Academy of Fine Art in Budapest, spending time in the capital, Florence, and Siena. In 1948, while traveling on foot from Ravenna to Rome, he visited the 24th Biennale di Venezia, where he explored the work of Max Ernst and Jackson Pollock. He returned to the country for a final time in 1982. These tours cemented his admiration for Italian painters of the proto- and early Renaissance, especially Giotto and Masaccio.
Azzurro is a chromatically focused retrospective that presents examples of Hantaï’s distinctive pliage works in a chronological sequence. The exhibition starts with the early canvas Peinture (Petit Nu) (1949), which depicts a figure against an intense turquoise background reminiscent of Renaissance frescoes. This is followed by Catamurons (1964), with its folded center and multiple color layers; Meun (1967), which incorporates unpainted sections in its corner areas; Étude (1969), in which uniformly folded canvas painted monochrome blue is juxtaposed with large irregular shards of white; and Blancs (1974), in which colorless passages occupy more space on the canvas than accompanying fragments of blue, green, and black.
The centerpiece of the exhibition is an array of large-scale blue Tabulapaintings (1972–76; 1980–82) that dominate the gallery’s ovoid main room. The monumental scale of these works reveals each square as the result of a unique, autonomous fold; the paintings also evoke the artist’s childhood memories of his mother’s aprons, the rolling and folding of which produced sequences of luminous color. Prioritizing touch over vision, Hantaï also imbued the Tabula works with references to historical artists including Matisse and Cezanne and, in their fusion of discipline and accident, to mathematical theory. The rarely seen “last studio” works (1982–85) in the final room feature unprecedented forms derived from folding and dripping, executed in balanced, vibrant color.
A further key inspiration for the artist was Pablo Picasso’s Blue Period (1901–04). “For Hantaï,” writes Baldassari, “the same pictorial spirituality linked the Blue Period to the altarpieces and frescoes of Giotto, Masaccio, Piero della Francesca, and Fra Angelico. Color was the link.” He was also captivated by the centrality of the color to the Catholic Marian cult, as seen in the painting Le Manteau de la Vierge (1960), which remains in the collection of the Vatican Museums. “From 1960,” Baldassari recounts, “with the conceptualization of ‘folding as method,’ the semantic association between mother’s apron, blue, and folding became a structural element in Hantaï’s painting. It forms the signifying syntagm at the heart of his practice.”
Azzurro is accompanied by a catalogue with an essay by Anne Baldassari.
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