"A touch of red, how nice,why not a little more of the same, and then it is too much! All the more reason to go on adding more and more. It is good to exaggerate, to go beyond, to pursue the extreme limit of what is suggested by the pictorial imagination." - Francoise Gilot, in Francoise Gilot Monograph 1940-2000, Lausanne, Editions Acatos: 2000, p.26.
No equivocation here: I love this painting.
Francoise Gilot was twenty-two when she painted this self portrait. She would not meet Henri Matisse for another three years but his importance to her work is already evident. She had learned lessons from Matisse's use of color; the orange dress and blue beads draw the eye upward to the face, modeled in blue-green and pink-purple. White lines take the place of shading, functioning as a bright color White lines, sometimes underlined by green, contain cubist angles modernist or paintings do.
At its extremities, fear of content led modern artists to disdain portraits and this helps to explain why Gilot's unapologetic ambition looks so fresh today. There is no amount of aesthetic criticism that nullifies the essence of a portrait: it is a meeting of minds: the artist and the sitter and (if these two are one and the same) the artist and the viewer. Women have been taught to be exquisitely sensitive to the moods of others and also long excluded from life drawing classes. These two things could cancel each other out but women have excelled at portraiture during the last century and critics have begun to reconsider artists as various as Cecelia Beaux< once dismissed as a society painter and Alice Neel, whose portraits as nude men were once labelled as "satires." ?
At its extremities, fear of content led modern artists to disdain portraits and this helps to explain why Gilot's unapologetic ambition looks so fresh today. There is no amount of aesthetic criticism that nullifies the essence of a portrait: it is a meeting of minds: the artist and the sitter and (if these two are one and the same) the artist and the viewer. Women have been taught to be exquisitely sensitive to the moods of others and also long excluded from life drawing classes. These two things could cancel each other out but women have excelled at portraiture during the last century and critics have begun to reconsider artists as various as Cecelia Beaux< once dismissed as a society painter and Alice Neel, whose portraits as nude men were once labelled as "satires." ?
She was twenty-one when she met the Great Artist; he was sixty-one. She was beautiful; he was famous. He knew how lucky he was; then he forget. They had so shared much in common; both of them had been precocious artists born to bourgeois families. The difference was that when he displayed artistic talent, his family supported him in every way. When she told her father that she intended to be an artist, he beat her and then disowned her. She was still the spirited woman who had attracted him, who laughed at his petulant moods but he was cruel, abusive, and unfaithful. She was the only woman who ever left the Great Artist. She left because he drained her energy; she could only paint when she was away from him. He told her that, without him, she would be no more than a footnote to the story of his life. He was wrong, but he must have regretted bringing up footnotes when she published her biography of life with the Great Artist. He sued to prevent its publication but it became a bestseller, drawing back the curtain on his mythic reputation.
To read more: Francoise Gilot, Life With Picasso, New York, McGraw Hill: 1962.
Image:
Francoise Gilot - Study for a Self Portrait, 1944, private collection, courtesy Sotheby's.