Musee cantonal des Beaux-Arts presents On Painting. Alex Katz & Félix Vallotton an exhibition on view 22 March–9 June 2013.
Alex Katz, Homage to Monet 1, 2009. Oil on canvas, 183 x 366 cm. Courtesy of the artist © 2013, ProLitteris, Zurich. All rights reserved. Reproduction and all use of the works other than individual and private consultation are forbidden without prior authorisation.
The Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts presents the art of two painters that one would immediately expect to be quite different: one, a French Swiss born in Lausanne in 1865, and the other, an American who is still very active and has worked in New York and Maine for more than sixty years.
On Painting. Alex Katz & Félix Vallotton presents more than 40 works by this major contemporary artist, ranging from the 1950s to the present day. The exhibition compares the works of the American with some 30 paintings by Félix Vallotton: this joint presentation offers a completely new perspective on the astonishing similarity between these two key figures of international painting.
Félix Vallotton (1865–1925) is more than ever in the contemporary eye. His work was recently shown at the Kunstmuseum in Berne (Sunsets, 2004/05), the Kunsthaus in Zurich and the Hamburger Kunsthalle (Idyll on the Edge, 2007/08). And in autumn 2013 the Musée d’Orsay in Paris will dedicate a large retrospective to his work, the first in the French capital. With more than 500 works (including drawings and prints), the Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts de Lausanne holds the largest Vallotton collection in the world. So as to show it off to best effect within its own walls, as it does not currently have the space to present the collection as a whole, the museum has decided to show the Vallotton works side by side with those of one of the best known American painters. Vallotton’s modernity no longer has to be made plain: when shown alongside the work of Alex Katz, it springs to the eye even today.
Born in 1927, Alex Katz is a major figure of late 20th-century American painting. His resolutely figurative art centres on such traditional genres as individual and group portraits, natural and urban landscapes, and floral still-lifes, and in the early 1960s he was associated with Pop Art on account of his very neutral technique that is close to advertising images and cinema stills. Making particular use of a deadpan, detached and often monumental approach, his representations are elaborated through the simplification of forms and planes and the reduction of the palette, extending Vallotton’s painting to the fringes of abstraction. Of the painters that have inspired Alex Katz, two that stand out are Pierre Bonnard and Jackson Pollock. Félix Vallotton, however, is not on the list nor was his work ever really known by the American. Nevertheless, surprising similarities are apparent between the two artists as their approach is identical: sublimation through painting.
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