Music also played an important role in Matisse’s family life — one of the most important paintings in the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia shows his daughter Marguerite at the piano with her brother Pierre (who also played the violin), in front of a score by Haydn. His other son Jean played the cello. For Matisse, the innumerable instruments, such as harmoniums, violins or gramophones, replicated the movements of his models which, by their decorative shape and aesthetic nature, were then reflected in the arabesques and curves of the paintings’ composition.
For him, even the movements of musicians imitated the diverse, undulating forms of objects and models. Music was not only the basis for his work in that it structured his compositions, its themes, rhythms, variations, harmony, and color, but, almost naturally, it would lead him to incorporate dance as well – to the movement of figures in real space.
In 1909, the Russian collector Sergey Shchukin, commissioned Matisse’s paintings ‘La Musique’ and ‘La Danse’. The circle of dancers became the inspiration for the monumental fresco commissioned by Dr. Barnes for his mansion in Merion, Pennsylvania. Matisse was inspired by the three rounded arches (lunettes) which reflected the dynamism of his dancing figures. While working on the fresco, Matisse made use of cut-out colored paper to test the various effects of form and movement – a method he would later perfect after he could no longer paint.
Throughout Matisse’s life, dance had played a significant role – not only as inspiration and as themes in his paintings, but also in working directly with dance companies. He had designed the sets and costumes for ‘Le Chant du Rossignol’ of Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes, with music by Stravinsky. In 1937 he was asked to produce the ballet screen for Léonide Massine’s ballet ‘Rouge et Noir ou Étrange Farandole’.
In 1947, increasingly restricted in his movements after his cancer operation, Matisse started to use gouache paper cut-outs in his works. In collaboration with the publisher Tériade, he published his book ‘Jazz’ — with a dancer on the cover — which combined color plates and handwritten texts, defined by Matisse at the end of the book as such:
“These images with their vivid, violent tones are grounded in crystallized memories of the circus, of popular tales or journeys. I did these pages of writing to quiet accompanying reactions to my chromatic and rhythmic improvisations, as pages that form a kind of “ambient sound” carrying them along, surrounding them and thereby protecting their particularities.”
The gouache cut-outs, with their inspiration coming from the circus, its performers, shapes of nature, and his travels to Morocco and Tahiti, are “cuts into color” — their improvisation and vitality echoing those of Jazz. Although born in America, the art of Jazz continued to evolve in Paris between the two World Wars. American expatriate writers, musicians and performers, such as Josephine Baker and the Révue Nègre, contributed to its success. Many African-American musicians found the artistic recognition and freedom in Paris which had been denied to them in the United States. As Jazz evolved, many of France’s other avant-garde artists adopted it as the sound of the 20th century, using it as inspiration in their own artistic endeavors.
During the last years of his life, Matisse designed the Chapelle du Rosaire for the Dominican Sisters of Vence, and considered it his masterpiece. The serenely white exterior and interior is enhanced by the beautiful stained-glass windows (again using cut-outs) in blue, green and yellow, replicating the tree of life, expressing, in a limited space, the idea of immensity and serenity. The windows’ reflection throughout the white interior of the chapel emphasizes the music of color – so important for Matisse during his entire life.
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