Amedeo Modigliani, Servant Girl, ca 1918.
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Modigliani & the Artists of Montparnasse
October 19, 2002 - January 12, 2003
Special Exhibition Galleries
Famous for his elongated forms, graceful portraits, and lush
nudes, Amedeo Modigliani (1884 - 1920) is among the most beloved of the
international artists who lived in Montparnasse, Paris, in the early twentieth
century. This exhibition placed Modigliani and his work in the context of his
friends and contemporaries, all living and working in what Marcel Duchamp described
as "the first truly international group of artists we ever had." Artists
such as Constantin Brancusi, Giorgio de Chirico, Henri Matisse, Modigliani,
Pablo Picasso and Chaim Soutine revolutionized creative expression by exploring
a myriad of artistic influences that included non-Western art and abstraction.
The resulting art is striking for its diversity: Cubist, Expressionist, and
Primitivist, with Modigliani's painting, sculpture, and works on paper
embodying all of these elements.
Born into an Italian Jewish family, Modigliani established a
successful career during his lifetime in spite of personal struggles and a
tragically short life, dying of tuberculosis at age thirty-five. In order to
provide a full and rich understanding of his art, this exhibition and its accompanying
catalogue explore Modiglianis relationship with Montparnasse, as well
as the avant-garde movements and figures of the time.
Albright-Knox Art Gallery Curator Kenneth Wayne organized this
major exhibition, gathering masterworks from world-renowned museum and collections
throughout North America, Europe, and Japan. Fifty-six of Modiglianis
paintings, sculptures, and works on paper were featured, including important
works from the Albright-Knox Art Gallerys distinguished collection. The
exhibition was accompanied by a 240-page catalogue illustrated with eighty-seven
plates in full color and 102 in duotone, published by Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
in association with the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. In addition to new information
about Modigliani and his contemporaries, the catalogue contains excerpts from
a surrealistic novella written by one of Modiglianis lovers, Beatrice
Hastings.
The Albright-Knox Art Gallery premiered this exciting exhibition
and was the only venue in the Eastern United States, before it traveled on
to the Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas, and Los Angeles County Museum
of Art, California.
This exhibition was organized and circulated by the Albright-Knox
Art Gallery and was supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the
Arts and Humanities and, in part, by a grant from the National Endowment for
the Arts.
Made possible, in Buffalo, through the generous support of .
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