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Posts Tagged ‘Spanish Flu’

Amadeo de Souza Cardoso-Corpus Christi ProcessionThere is an exhibit of paintings currently hanging at the Grand Palais in Paris that features the work of the early 20th century Portuguese artist Amadeo de Souza-Cardoso.  It is only the second major retrospective of his work and the first since 1958.  He is another of those artists who are probably not on your radar– I know I was unaware of his work.  But once I found it, I couldn’t shake the memory of it.

Amadeo de Souza Cardoso-Greyhounds 1911He was born in the north of Portugal in 1887 near the small city of Amarante.  While still a teen he made his way to Paris where he absorbed the fertile art scene that was in place.  He began painting and drawing while becoming close friends with many artists and writers such as Gertrude Stein, Modigliani, Juan Gris  and Brancusi.

His work encompassed the Cubist, Modernist and Futurist movements, moving seamlessly among them while maintaining his unique voice in whatever style he was working at the moment.  When I viewed a large number of  his work, I was knocked out by the consistency and strength that ran through it.  Whether his work is in paint or in pen and ink, it is both vibrant and fully realized.

During the time of the first World War, Souza-Cardoso’s star was rising quickly.  But like so many other millions of people, he was struck down by the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918.  He was only 30 years old.

What might have been…

In the fast paced and quickly changing atmosphere of the art world of the era, Souza-Cardoso’s work soon forgotten until a minor awakening in 1952 in his native  Portugal.  In Amarante, his work was given a room in the museum there and in the years since a small museum has been formed to feature it.

Hopefully, the greater public will soon know the name Souza-Cardoso.  I think it’s a name worth knowing.  I am showing just a few  pieces of his work here.  There were so many more that I could have chose.  Just great stuff.

AMADEO_S_CARDOSO-SEM_TIT(CLOWN_CAVALO_SALAMANDRA)191112 Amadeo de Souza-Cardoso-Parto Da Viola Bom Ménage Amadeo de Souza-Cardoso- The Kitchen at Manhufe House 1913

Eduardo Mota digitalizou "Le Saut du Lapin" de Amadeo de Souza-Cardoso

Eduardo Mota digitalizou “Le Saut du Lapin” de Amadeo de Souza-Cardoso

Amadeo de Souza-Cardoso-Three White Greyhounds Amadeo de Souza Cardoso-Le Tigre Amadeo de Souza Cardoso-La Dentate du Cerf 1912

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Egon Schiele- Death and the Maiden

Egon Schiele- Death and the Maiden

Going to the Neue Galerie the other day rekindled my fascination with the work of Austrian artist Egon Schiele.  There’s a lot of disturbing material in some of his work as well as in his bio that is hard to overlook even as I admire the work.  But Egon Schieledespite that, Schiele created, to my way of thinking, one of the most provocative and  distinct bodies of work in modern art– all before an all too early death from the Spanish Flu in 1917.

He was 28 years old.

I think of  that and then think of looking closely at the beauty and quality of his brushwork, I can only wonder what might have come in later years.  What masterpieces he might have created.  But as it is, he left us a rich and varied body of work, one that constantly both satisfies and provokes.

I particularly love his landscapes and cityscapes.  Their abstract qualities and coloring just draw me in immediately.  I always find myself inspired after looking at his work, like there’s something pushing out from it that runs into my own need for expression.

I am showing some of my favorites here:

Egon Schiele  Einzelne Häuser 1915 Egon Schiele - Krumau Town Crescent I  1915 Egon Schiele Hauswand um Fluss Egon Schiele Houses with Washed Clothes Egon Schiele -Landscape at  Krumau Egon Schiele Summer Landscape Egon Schiele Town Among the Greenery egon-schiele_agony1

 

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