Experience the
celebrity culture of 19th-century Paris
Aristide Bruant
snarls. Loïe Fuller swirls on stage in the “serpentine dance.” The critic
Édouard Dujardin eyes Jane Avril as they listen to the vulgar songs of Yvette
Guilbert. These are celebrities of 19th-century Paris made famous by Henri de
Toulouse-Lautrec, who captured the spectacle of the fin de siècle in evocative
posters, prints, and paintings.
“Toulouse-Lautrec
and the Stars of Paris” explores the celebrity culture of Lautrec’s time and
the artist’s fascination with the personal lives of les stars as well as the
roles that they played. With expressive lines and brazen colors, Lautrec
depicted the defining gestures, costumes, and expressions of spectacular
performers, many of whom were his personal friends and habitués of Montmartre,
the focus of Parisian nightlife and a haven for acrobatic dancers and destitute
students, reprobate aristocrats and middle-class pleasure-seekers.
The exhibition
includes approximately 200 works and is composed of thematic sections
highlighting Lautrec’s formal innovations, such as dramatic lighting effects
and color combinations; the changing artistic and social landscapes of Paris,
with scenes of the city by day and by night; cafés, cabarets, and theaters; and
celebrities of the age. The display also incorporates works by Lautrec’s
contemporaries Pierre Bonnard, Mary Cassatt, Edgar Degas, John Singer Sargent,
James Jacques Joseph Tissot, and others—presenting him in the context of his
heroes, peers, and followers. Organized by the MFA in partnership with the
Boston Public Library, the exhibition draws on both institutions’ rich
holdings, and includes key loans of paintings and graphic arts from public and
private collections.
https://www.mfa.org/exhibitions/toulouse-lautrec-and-the-stars-of-paris
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario