René Magritte

René Magritte
René Magritte

Portrait of Magritte by Lothar Wolleh, 1967
Birth name René François Ghislain Magritte
Born 21 November 1898(1898-11-21)
Lessines, Belgium
Died 15 August 1967(1967-08-15) (aged 68)
Brussels, Belgium
Nationality Belgian
Field Painter
Movement Surrealism
Works The Treachery of Images
On the Threshold of Liberty
The Son of Man
The Empty Mask
The Difficult Crossing
The Human Condition
Not to be Reproduced
Time Transfixed
Elective Affinities
The Portrait
Golconda
The Mysteries of the Horizon
The Menaced Assassin

René François Ghislain Magritte[p] (21 November 1898 – 15 August 1967) was a Belgian surrealist artist. He became well known for a number of witty and thought-provoking images. His work challenges observers' preconditioned perceptions of reality.

Contents

Early life and career

Magritte was born in Lessines, in the province of Hainaut, in 1898, the eldest son of Léopold Magritte, who was a tailor and textile merchant,[1] and Régina (née Bertinchamps), a milliner until her marriage. Little is known about Magritte's early life. He began lessons in drawing in 1910. On 12 March 1912, his mother committed suicide by drowning herself in the River Sambre. This was not her first attempt; she had made many over a number of years, driving her husband Léopold to lock her into her bedroom. One day she escaped, and was missing for days. She was later discovered a mile or so down the nearby river, dead. According to a legend, 13-year-old Magritte was present when her body was retrieved from the water, but recent research has discredited this story, which may have originated with the family nurse.[2] Supposedly, when his mother was found, her dress was covering her face, an image that has been suggested as the source of several of Magritte's paintings in 1927–1928 of people with cloth obscuring their faces, including Les Amants.[3]

Magritte's earliest paintings, which date from about 1915, were Impressionistic in style.[2] From 1916 to 1918, he studied at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, under Constant Montald, but found the instruction uninspiring. The paintings he produced during the years 1918–1924 were influenced by Futurism and by the offshoot of Cubism practiced by Metzinger.[2] Most of his works of this period are female nudes.

In 1922, Magritte married Georgette Berger, whom he had met as a child in 1913.[1] From December 1920 until September 1921, Magritte served in the Belgian infantry in the Flemish town of Beverlo near Leopoldsburg. In 1922–1923, he worked as a draughtsman in a wallpaper factory, and was a poster and advertisement designer until 1926, when a contract with Galerie le Centaure in Brussels made it possible for him to paint full-time. In 1926, Magritte produced his first surreal painting, The Lost Jockey (Le jockey perdu), and held his first exhibition in Brussels in 1927. Critics heaped abuse on the exhibition. Depressed by the failure, he moved to Paris where he became friends with André Breton, and became involved in the surrealist group.

Magritte's signature used on his work.

Galerie la Centaure closed at the end of 1929, ending Magritte's contract income. Having made little impact in Paris, Magritte returned to Brussels in 1930 and resumed working in advertising.[4] He and his brother, Paul, formed an agency which earned him a living wage.

Surrealist patron Edward James allowed Magritte, in the early stages of his career, to stay rent free in his London home and paint. James is featured in two of Magritte's pieces, Le Principe du Plaisir (The Pleasure Principle) and La Reproduction Interdite, a painting also known as Not to be Reproduced.[5]

During the German occupation of Belgium in World War II he remained in Brussels, which led to a break with Breton. He briefly adopted a colorful, painterly style in 1943–44, an interlude known as his "Renoir Period", as a reaction to his feelings of alienation and abandonment that came with living in German-occupied Belgium. In 1946, renouncing the violence and pessimism of his earlier work, he joined several other Belgian artists in signing the manifesto Surrealism in Full Sunlight.[6] During 1947–48, Magritte's "Vache Period", he painted in a provocative and crude Fauve style. During this time, Magritte supported himself through the production of fake Picassos, Braques and Chiricos—a fraudulent repertoire he was later to expand into the printing of forged banknotes during the lean postwar period. This venture was undertaken alongside his brother Paul Magritte and fellow Surrealist and 'surrogate son' Marcel Mariën, to whom had fallen the task of selling the forgeries.[7] At the end of 1948, he returned to the style and themes of his prewar surrealistic art.

His work was exhibited in the United States in New York in 1936 and again in that city in two retrospective exhibitions, one at the Museum of Modern Art in 1965, and the other at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1992.

Magritte died of pancreatic cancer on 15 August 1967 in his own bed, aged 68, and was interred in Schaerbeek Cemetery, Evere, Brussels.

Popular interest in Magritte's work rose considerably in the 1960s, and his imagery has influenced pop, minimalist and conceptual art.[8] In 2005 he came 9th in the Walloon version of De Grootste Belg (The Greatest Belgian); in the Flemish version he was 18th.

Philosophical and artistic gestures

It is a union that suggests the essential mystery of the world. Art for me is not an end in itself, but a means of evoking that mystery.
 
— René Magritte on putting seemingly unrelated objects together in juxtaposition[9]

Magritte's work frequently displays a collection of ordinary objects in an unusual context, giving new meanings to familiar things. The use of objects as other than what they seem is typified in his painting, The Treachery of Images (La trahison des images), which shows a pipe that looks as though it is a model for a tobacco store advertisement. Magritte painted below the pipe "Ceci n'est pas une pipe" ("This is not a pipe"), which seems a contradiction, but is actually true: the painting is not a pipe, it is an image of a pipe. It does not "satisfy emotionally"—when Magritte once was asked about this image, he replied that of course it was not a pipe, just try to fill it with tobacco.[10]

Image of pipe and passport of René Magritte

Magritte used the same approach in a painting of an apple: he painted the fruit and then used an internal caption or framing device to deny that the item was an apple. In these "Ceci n'est pas" works, Magritte points out that no matter how closely, through realism-art, we come to depicting an item accurately, we never do catch the item itself.

Among Magritte's works are a number of surrealist versions of other famous paintings. Elsewhere, Magritte challenges the difficulty of artwork to convey meaning with a recurring motif of an easel, as in his The Human Condition series (1933, 1935) or The Promenades of Euclid (1955) (wherein the spires of a castle are "painted" upon the ordinary streets which the canvas overlooks). In a letter to André Breton, he wrote of The Human Condition that it was irrelevant if the scene behind the easel differed from what was depicted upon it, "but the main thing was to eliminate the difference between a view seen from outside and from inside a room."[11] The windows in some of these pictures are framed with heavy drapes, suggesting a theatrical motif.[12]

Magritte's style of surrealism is more representational than the "automatic" style of artists such as Joan Miró. Magritte's use of ordinary objects in unfamiliar spaces is joined to his desire to create poetic imagery. He described the act of painting as "the art of putting colors side by side in such a way that their real aspect is effaced, so that familiar objects—the sky, people, trees, mountains, furniture, the stars, solid structures, graffiti—become united in a single poetically disciplined image. The poetry of this image dispenses with any symbolic significance, old or new.”[13]

René Magritte described his paintings as "visible images which conceal nothing; they evoke mystery and, indeed, when one sees one of my pictures, one asks oneself this simple question, 'What does that mean?'. It does not mean anything, because mystery means nothing either, it is unknowable."[14]

Magritte's constant play with reality and illusion has been attributed to the early death of his mother. Psychoanalysts who have examined bereaved children have said that Magritte's back and forth play with reality and illusion reflects his "constant shifting back and forth from what he wishes—'mother is alive'—to what he knows—'mother is dead' ".[15]

Artists influenced by Magritte

Contemporary artists have been greatly influenced by René Magritte's stimulating examination of the fickleness of images. Some artists who have been influenced by Magritte's works include John Baldessari, Ed Ruscha, Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns, Vija Celmins, Marcel Broodthaers, Jan Verdoodt, Martin Kippenberger and Storm Thorgerson. Some of the artists' works integrate direct references and others offer contemporary viewpoints on his abstract fixations.[16]

Magritte's use of simple graphic and everyday imagery has been compared to that of the Pop artists. His influence in the development of Pop art has been widely recognized,[17] although Magritte himself discounted the connection. He considered the Pop artists' representation of "the world as it is" as "their error", and contrasted their attention to the transitory with his concern for "the feeling for the real, insofar as it is permanent."[17] The 2006–2007 LACMA exhibition “Magritte and Contemporary Art: The Treachery of Images" examined the relationship between Magritte and contemporary art.[18]

In popular culture

The 1960s brought a great increase in public awareness of Magritte's work.[8] Thanks to his "sound knowledge of how to present objects in a manner both suggestive and questioning," his works have been frequently adapted or plagiarized in advertisements, posters, book covers and the like.[19] Examples include album covers such as Beck-Ola by The Jeff Beck Group (reproducing Magritte's The Listening Room), Jackson Browne's 1974 album Late for the Sky, with artwork inspired by Magritte's L'Empire des Lumières, Oregon's album Out of the Woods referring to Carte Blanche, and the Firesign Theatre's album Just Folks . . . A Firesign Chat based on The Mysteries of the Horizon.

Tom Stoppard has written a surrealist play called After Magritte.

Douglas Hofstadter's book Gödel, Escher, Bach uses Magritte works for many of its illustrations.

Paul Simon's song "Rene and Georgette Magritte with Their Dog after the War", inspired by a photograph of Magritte by Lothar Wolleh, appears on the 1983 album Hearts and Bones.

Magritte's imagery has inspired filmmakers ranging from the surrealist Marcel Mariën to mainstream directors such as Jean-Luc Godard, Alain Robbe-Grillet, Bernardo Bertolucci, Nicholas Roeg, and Terry Gilliam.[20][21][22]

According to Ellen Burstyn, in the 1998 documentary The Fear of God: 25 Years of "The Exorcist", the iconic poster shot for the film The Exorcist was inspired by Magritte's L'Empire des Lumières.

In 2010, the music video of Koolhaus by Markus Schulz under his Dakota guise was inspired from the works of Magritte.

Magritte Museum

The Magritte Museum in Brussels

The Magritte Museum opened to the public on 30 May 2009 in Brussels.[23] Housed in the five-level neo-classical Hotel Altenloh, on the Place Royale, it displays some 200 original Magritte paintings, drawings and sculptures[24] including The Return, Scheherazade and The Empire of Light.[25]

Another museum is located at rue Esseghem 135 in Brussels in Magritte's former home, where he lived with his wife from 1930 to 1954. A painting by Magritte was stolen from this museum on the morning of 24 September 2009 by two armed men. The robbery occurred just after 10 a.m., shortly after the museum opened. A man rang the doorbell, inquired if visiting hours had begun, and then pointed a gun at the museum attendant while an accomplice went inside. The thieves made museum workers and visitors kneel in a courtyard while they left on foot with a 1948 painting, Olympia, a nude portrait of Magritte’s wife. The two men, who spoke English and French, set off an alarm when they broke a glass plate that protected the painting, but had already escaped by the time the police arrived. The stolen work is said to be worth about $1.1 million.[26][27]

Selected list of works

  • 1920 Landscape
  • 1922 The Station and L'Écuyère
  • 1923 Self-portrait, Sixth Nocturne, Georgette at the Piano and Donna
  • 1925 The Bather and The Window
  • 1926 The Lost Jockey, The Mind of the Traveler, Sensational News, The Difficult Crossing, The Vestal's Agony, The Midnight Marriage, The Musings of a Solitary Walker, After the Water the Clouds, Popular Panorama, Landscape and The Encounter
  • 1927 Young Girl Eating a Bird, The Oasis (started in 1925), ″Le Double Secret", The Meaning of Night, Let Out of School, The Man from the Sea, The Tiredness of Life, The Light-breaker, A Passion for Light, The Menaced Assassin, Reckless Sleeper, La Voleuse, The Fast Hope, L'Atlantide and The Muscles of the Sky
  • 1928 The Lining of Sleep (started in 1927), Intermission (started in 1927), The Flowers of the Abyss, Discovery, The Lovers I & II,[3] The Voice of Space, The Daring Sleeper, The Acrobat's Ideas, The Automaton, The Empty Mask, Reckless Sleeper, The Secret Life and Attempting the Impossible
  • 1929 The Treachery of Images (started in 1928), Threatening Weather and On the Threshold of Liberty
  • 1930 Pink Belles, Tattered Skies, The Eternally Obvious, The Lifeline, The Annunciation and Celestial Perfections
  • 1931 The Voice of the Air, Summer and The Giantess
  • 1932 The Universe Unmasked
  • 1933 Elective Affinities, The Human Condition and The Unexpected Answer
  • 1934 The Rape
  • 1935 The Discovery of Fire, The Human Condition, Revolution, Perpetual Motion, Collective Invention, The False Mirror and The Portrait
  • 1936 Surprise Answer, Clairvoyance, The Healer, The Philosopher's Lamp, Spiritual Exercises, Portrait of Irène Hamoir, La Méditation and Forbidden Literature
  • 1937 The Future of Statues, The Black Flag, Not to be Reproduced, Portrait of Edward James and Portrait of Rena Schitz, On the Threshold of Liberty
  • 1938 Time Transfixed, The Domain of Arnheim and Steps of Summer
  • 1939 Victory
  • 1940 The Return, The Wedding Breakfast and Les Grandes Espérances
  • 1941 The Break in the Clouds
  • 1942 Misses de L'Isle Adam, L'Ile au Tréson, Memory, Black Magic, Les compagnons de la peur and The Misanthropes
  • 1943 The Return of the Flame, Universal Gravitation and Monsieur Ingres's Good Days
  • 1944 The Good Omens
  • 1945 Treasure Island, Les Rencontres Naturelles and Black Magic
  • 1946 L'Intellience and Les Mille et une Nuits
  • 1947 La Philosophie dans le boudoir, The Cicerone, The Liberator, The Fair Captive, La Part du Feu and The Red Model
  • 1948 Blood Will Tell, Memory, The Mountain Dweller, The Art of Life, The Pebble, The Lost Jockey, God's Solon, Shéhérazade, L'Ellipse and Famine and The Taste of Sorrow
  • 1949 Megalomania, Elementary Cosmogany, and Perspective, the Balcony
  • 1950 Making an Entrance, The Legend of the Centuries, Towards Pleasure, The Labors of Alexander, The Empire of Light II, The Fair Captive and The Art of Conversation
  • 1951 David's Madame Récamier (parodying the Portrait of Madame Récamier), Pandora's Box, The Song of the Violet, The Spring Tide and The Smile
  • 1952 Personal Values and Le Sens de la Pudeur
  • 1953 Golconda, The Listening Room and a fresco for the Knokke Casino
  • 1954 The Invisible World, The Explanation and The Empire of Light
  • 1955 Memory of a Journey and The Mysteries of the Horizon
  • 1956 The Sixteenth of September
  • 1957 The Fountain of Youth and The Enchanted Domain
  • 1958 The Golden Legend, Hegel's Holiday, The Banquet and The Familiar World
  • 1959 The Castle in the Pyrenees, The Battle of the Argonne, The Anniversary, The Month of the Grape Harvest and The Glass Key
  • 1960 The Memoirs of a Saint
  • 1962 The Great Table, The Healer, Waste of Effort, Mona Lisa (circa 1962) and L'embeillie (circa 1962)
  • 1963 The Great Family, The Open Air, The Beautiful Season, Princes of the Autumn, Young Love, La Recherche de la Vérité and The Telescope
  • 1964 Evening Falls, The Great War, The Son of Man and Song of Love
  • 1965 Carte Blanche, The Thought Which Sees, Ages Ago and The Beautiful Walk (circa 1965)
  • 1966 The Shades, The Happy Donor, The Gold Ring, The Pleasant Truth, The Two Mysteries, and The Mysteries of the Horizon
  • 1967 Les Grâces Naturelles, La Géante, The Blank Page, Good Connections, The Art of Living and several bronze sculptures based on Magritte's previous works.

See also

Notes

[p] - The name René Magritte is pronounced as "Ruh-nay Ma-greet".[28]
  1. ^ a b Meuris 1991, p 216.
  2. ^ a b c Calvocoressi 1990, p. 9.
  3. ^ a b "National Gallery of Australia | Les Amants [The lovers]". Nga.gov.au. http://nga.gov.au/International/Catalogue/Detail.cfm?IRN=148052. Retrieved 2010-10-14. 
  4. ^ Meuris 1991, p. 217.
  5. ^ "Professor Bram Hammacher", The Edward James Foundation souvenir guide, edited Peter Sarginson, 1992.
  6. ^ Meuris 1991, p. 218.
  7. ^ Lambith, Andrew (28 February 1998). "Ceci n'est pas an artist". The Independent (London). http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/ceci-nest-pas-an-artist-1147477.html. Retrieved 22 May 2010. 
  8. ^ a b Calvocoressi 1990, p. 26.
  9. ^ Glueck, Grace, "A Bottle Is a Bottle"; The New York Times, December 19, 1965
  10. ^ Spitz 1994, p.47
  11. ^ Sylvester 1992, p.298
  12. ^ Spitz 1994, p.50
  13. ^ Frasnay, Daniel. The Artist’s World. “Magritte.” New York: The Viking Press, 1969. pp. 99-107
  14. ^ "Flanders - New Magritte Museum Brussels". www.visitflanders.us. http://www.visitflanders.us/index.php?page=NewMagritteMuseumBrussels. Retrieved 2009-03-29. 
  15. ^ Collins, Bradley I. Jr. "Psychoanalysis and Art History". Art Journal, Vol. 49, No. 2, College Art Association. pp. 182-186.
  16. ^ Amra Brooks (27 December 2006). Los Angeles: Magritte by Baldessari, Road Trips and Rock 'n' Roll. ARTINFO. http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/24140/los-angeles-magritte-by-baldessari-road-trips-and-rock-n-roll/. Retrieved 2008-04-24 
  17. ^ a b Meuris 1991, p. 202.
  18. ^ Stephanie Brown (2006). Magritte and Contemporary Art: The Treachery of Images. Los Angeles county Museum of Art and Ludion 
  19. ^ Meuris 1991, pp. 199–201.
  20. ^ Levy 1997, p. 105.
  21. ^ Bertolucci, Gérard, & Kline 2000, p. 53.
  22. ^ Fragola & Smith 1995, p. 103.
  23. ^ Magritte Museum
  24. ^ "Two New Museums for Tintin and Magritte". Time. 30 May 2009. http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1901775,00.html. Retrieved 2009-05-30. 
  25. ^ Victor Zak October 2009 page 20 Westways Magazine
  26. ^ The Guardian Retrieved 24 September 2009
  27. ^ NY Times. Retrieved 24 September 2009.
  28. ^ "C.U.S.D. Art Masterpiece Manual", Mary Lynne Lasure, p.37, web: CUSD-artm-PDF.

References

  • Allmer, Patricia (2009). René Magritte - Beyond Painting. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0719079284. 
  • Bertolucci, Bernardo; Gérard, F. S.; Kline, T. J. (2000). Bernardo Bertolucci: Interviews. Jackson: Miss. ISBN 1-5780-6205-5. 
  • Calvocoressi, Richard (1990). Magritte. New York: Watson-Guptill. ISBN 0-8230-2962-X. 
  • Fragola, Anthony; Smith, Roch C. (1995). The Erotic Dream Machine: Interviews with Alain Robbe-Grillet on His Films. SIU Press. ISBN 0809320045. 
  • Kaplan, Gilbert E. and Baum, Timothy (1982). The Graphic Work of René Magritte. Two Editions. ISBN 0-6863-9199-3. 
  • Levy, S (1997). Surrealism: Surrealist visuality. Edinburgh: Keele University Press. ISBN 1853311936. 
  • Meuris, Jacques (1991). René Magritte. Cologne: Benedikt Taschen. ISBN 3-8228-0546-7. 
  • Roisin, Jacques (1998). Ceci n'est pas une biographie de Magritte. Bruxelles: Alice Editions. ISBN 2-930182-05-9. 
  • Spitz, Ellen Handler (1994). Museums of the Mind. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-3000-6029-7. 
  • Sylvester, David (1992). Magritte. Abrams. ISBN 0-5000-9227-3. 
  • West, Shearer (1996). The Bullfinch Guide to Art. UK: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc. ISBN 0-8212-2137-X. 

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