PAGE 6 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 27 1 S PAGE. 6sr THE iCCA DAILY -\l IirA , ,IIAPY \ t 7 .1,J MODERNIST MATISSE: Note Continual Growth in Works of Late French Painter I (Continued from Page 1) talents and the gradual elimina- one. It was the struggle to attain Even in the early 1900's when Matisse's development and pro- tion of crudities and impurities in consistency. Matisse was being called a "wild gress over the years has rarely his performance. In all this how- beast" by the public and the pub- flagged or gone astray, and re- ever, the expressive theme of "Joy THE LYRIC theme of Matisse's lic press, contemporary painters viewing this development one can- of Life" persists. There was cer- art, its austere pleasurable- were moving towards a much more not help but be impressed with tainly drama in Matisse's life, as ness, has paradoxically always radical conception of art. Matisse's sense of direction, his there must be in all artist's, but been the major hinderance to a George Rouault, his friend and very deliberate'cultivation of his the drama was purely an artistic wide and full appreciation. fellow student, was only one of . 7 , ;, ,, ,t Look. axhaIIa the first realistically priced 35mm precision camera with INTERCHANGEABLE LENSES UNBELIEVABLE AMAZING ) REVOLUTIONARY Come in and see for yourself Pr many young painters who found their themes in the violence and anguish of modern experience- and Picasso was soon leading an entire generation of artists in the Cubist experimentation with for- mal values which eventually arriv- ed at a complete transformation of the traditional representational and expressive functions of art. It was these movements which by and large absorbed the atten- tion of the avant-garde and made the more powerful impression on the public. In comparrison Matisse; "The Fauve," appeared to be rather tame; there was inescapable authority in his work but to the rambunctious early decades of the century it was too sedate. Until the thirties, the circle of Matisse's admirers and followers remained fairly small. The French, who might have recognized, one thinks, their emi- nently national traits in his work were slow in appreciation and as an interesting result, the greatest collections of Matisse's canvasses were formed by Americans: Ger- trude Stein and her brother, the Cone sisters of Baltimore and Dr. Barnes of Philadelphia. In the studios, Matisse's stature was respected and his influence always felt. He was turned to as a standard and a stimulant but he struck not noticeable fires. He was perhaps too much of an olym- pian. In any case there has been a very perceptible change of atti- tude regarding Matisse since the last war. Whatever the complex reasons for our modifications of judge- ment-and maybe it was that the war has taught us to admire the olympians - Matisse's stature in the general estimate has grown. Of course, it is true that an en- tire generation of post-war paint- ers has discovered in his lyric line and sensibilities for color and an- alogy to their own intuitive ex- pressionism. One of the spokesmen for the "Abstract-Expressionists" of our decade finds that "Matisse, with his magnificent but transitional style, which does not compare with Cubism for historical im- portance, is able to rest securely in his position as the greatest master of the Twentieth century " In such statements of opin- ions, and there have been many like them, Matisse is ofen praised as the old master whose merit was that he discovered lyricism in our times and, regardless of dis- traction-and isolation, remained faithful to his discovery. The term "Old Master" has been out of fashion in modern art since 1900. Certainly the title was incompatible with the pace of our times and with its insistence on continued inventiveness and creativity ,almost in and for it- self. However, at mid-century it must be said that some of our moderns have become "Old Masters'-per- haps despite themselves. For one thing they have en- dured, and automatically their art has taken on richness, strength and personal distinction. It has also taken on the histori- cal depth, which is itself an en- hancing quality. Matisse has become old as an artist, and now there is the finality to his work, but we mean, I think, much more when we regard him as one of our very few "Old Mast- ers," [Travel Issue Spotlighting high-tented and little-known tourist spots in Europe, Africa and North and South America, the March 27 Sunday Magazine will be de- voted almost entirely to travel items. 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