Cubism, Trompe l’Oeil, and Juan Gris – The Artsology Weblog

I loved a go to to the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork final week, and one of many exhibits I used to be wanting ahead to seeing was “Cubism and the Trompe l’Oeil Tradition,” which in contrast these two creative kinds. I’ve lengthy been a fan of cubist art, and was anticipating to be wowed by cubist work by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, who have been the first pioneers of this model. However I got here away from the present pondering that Juan Gris was in truth the standout star of this present. Maybe it’s because I’m very aware of Picasso’s and Braque’s cubist works, having seen a lot of them reproduced in artwork books many occasions in addition to on this and different museums previously. And whereas I’m aware of the work of Juan Gris, the work included on this present have been both new to me or just stood out as one thing contemporary and completely different from the Picassos and Braques that I really like.
Right here’s a pair of Juan Gris cubist work from the present: beneath left, “Violin and Engraving,” 1913, and beneath proper, “Bottle and Fruit Dish,” 1916.

If I can higher clarify why these appealed to me, one of many issues that appeared contemporary and completely different was Gris’ expanded use of coloration. Picasso and Braque typically stayed in a spread of earth tones, so using blue by Gris (above left) and different daring colours, akin to pink, yellow and inexperienced (seen in different works not proven right here), actually made his works pop. The Met truly has a really in-depth evaluation of Juan Gris within the context of cubism and this exhibition, try their coverage of him here.
Don’t get me incorrect, I liked seeing the Picassos and Braques, and to a lesser-extent, the trompe l’oeil work, which – to me – appeared extra like comparability factors on this exhibition for the way the cubist artists have been radically altering a more-traditional nonetheless life model. This subsequent pairing helps clarify what I imply: at left is “Nonetheless Life with Violin, Ewer, and Bouquet of Flowers,” 1657, by J.S. Bernard, and at proper is “Nonetheless Life with Compote and Glass,” 1914-15, by Pablo Picasso. The Bernard portray is gorgeous, I really like the folds and shadows of the oriental rug masking the desk and the precise particulars and lighting of the assorted objects on this nonetheless life. However then one can check out Picasso doing the identical factor – so far as portray objects on a desk – however he’s distorting the objects, breaking them up and reassembling them in an abstracted kind, and flattening out the sense of area.

The exhibition is up by way of this coming Sunday, January 22, 2023, so for those who get an opportunity to catch it on one among its final days, I’d extremely recommend it. There’s a lot extra to the present than what I coated right here, however hopefully I supplied an introduction that may result in additional investigation. You can even get info on planning a visit to the Met here.