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April 1996

Monsieur Pellerin's collection: a footnote to 'Cézanne'

by Karen Wilkin

Among the most memorable paintings in the Museum of Modern Art’s great Matisse retrospective in 1992, an exhibition full of memorable paintings, was a solemn frontal image of a bearded man seated tensely erect, hands clasped in front of him. Painted in 1916 to 1917, the period of some of Matisse’s most compelling portraits, it was striking even in the company of the Beaubourg’s fetching vision of the actress Greta Prozor, seated in an armchair, and the Guggenheim’s stiffly upright Italian Woman, that strange picture in which the swooping plane of the background threatens to engulf the figure. The portrait of the bearded man was pared down to essentials: a rigid full-face figure against a dark ground, as hieratic as a Byzantine pantocrator, as implacable as an Egyptian statue. Matisse described the curve of his model’s smooth, bald skull and high cheekbones with an authorative circle that irresistibly recalled both the conceptualized drawing of ic ...

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Karen Wilkin is an editor at The Hudson Review and on the faculty at the New York Studio School
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 14 April 1996, on page 18
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