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Tombstone of Henri Matisse and his wife Amélie Noellie, cemetery of the Monastère Notre Dame de Cimiez, Cimiez, France. The first painting of Matisse acquired by a public collection was Still Life with Geraniums (1910), acquired in 1912 by the Pinakothek der Moderne. [73]
The Green Stripe (also known as The Green Line or Madame Matisse) is an oil painting from 1905 by French artist Henri Matisse of his wife, Amélie Noellie Matisse-Parayre. The title stems from the vertical green stripe down the middle of Madame Matisse's face, an artistic decision consistent with the techniques and values of Fauvism.
Woman with a Hat (French: La femme au chapeau) is an oil-on-canvas painting by Henri Matisse.It depicts Matisse's wife, Amélie Matisse. [1] It was painted in 1905 and exhibited at the Salon d'Automne during the autumn of the same year, along with works by André Derain, Maurice de Vlaminck and several other artists later known as "Fauves".
Throughout 1938, Henri Matisse made a series of portrait sketches of Alexina. [2] When her husband was mobilized in Paris at the outbreak of World War II, she ran his gallery for some months. [1] In 1949 Pierre and Teeny separated due to Pierre's infidelity with Patricia Kane Matta, the former wife of surrealist painter Roberto Matta. [3]
Asked how Matisse's drawings seem to have been done in a single flourish, she said she was "a pretty good eraser". [6] Her second book, Henri Matisse: Contre vents et marées (French Edition) 1996 (in English: Against Winds and Storms), is her carefully detailed and documented account of the years of Matisse's "second life" from the early 1940s.
The new exhibit, Verdant, will open Friday, Feb. 14 and feature three French paintings: “The Battle of Love” by Paul Cézanne in 1880, “Still Life with Sleeping Woman” by Henri Matisse in ...
The Conversation, a painting by Henri Matisse dating from 1908 to 1912, depicts the artist and his wife facing each other before a background of intense blue. It is in the collection of the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia. This was among several works acquired directly from Matisse in Paris by the Russian collector Sergei Shchukin.
Madras Rouge (The Red Madras Headdress) is a painting by Henri Matisse from 1907. The woman depicted is the painter's wife, Amélie Noellie Parayre Matisse. It is held in the Barnes Foundation, in Philadelphia. The painting was illustrated in Gelett Burgess, "The Wild Men of Paris", The Architectural Record, May 1910, New York. [1]