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Bathers (Metzinger)

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fair. But now, translated into the idiom of subjective beauty, into this strange Neo-Classic language, those same women, redrawn, appear in stiff, crude, nervous lines in patches of fierce color. Surely, Metzinger should know what such things mean. Picasso never painted a pretty woman, though we have noticed that he likes to associate with them. Czobel sees them through the bars of his cage, and roars out tones of mauve and cinnabar. Derain sees them as cones and prisms, and Braque as if they had been sawn out of blocks of wood by carpenters’ apprentices. But Metzinger is more tender towards the sex. He arranges them as flowers are arranged on tapestry and wall paper; he simplifies them to mere patterns, and he carries them gently past the frontier of Poster Land to the world of the Ugly so tenderly that they are not much damaged—only more faint, more vegetable, more anaemic.
958: 656: 422:, where he may have seen Picasso's painting. There are differences, too, worth noting between the two works (aside from the size and colors which are unknown in the Metzinger case). While the dominant feature of Picasso's painting is the landscape, Metzinger chose to highlight the figures; the landscape playing only a secondary role in the overall composition. Metzinger's figures are much larger relative to the canvas. They are prominently and symmetrically displayed, and of lighter color contrast relative to Picasso's asymmetrical juxtaposition and subdued contrasting. Two of Metzinger's nudes—to the right and left of the dominant central figures—are quite inconspicuous, as in Picasso's piece. In both paintings the nudes and landscape have become unified, not presuming a representation of reality. 838: 940: 903: 861: 884: 337: 922: 983: 1574: 1008: 386:"So, music does not attempt to imitate Nature’s sounds, but it does interpret and embody emotions awakened by Nature through a convention of its own, in a way to be aesthetically pleasing. In some such way, we, taking out hint from Nature, construct decoratively pleasing harmonies and symphonies of color expression of our sentiment." (Jean Metzinger, circa 1909) 356:
importance. By many it was taken seriously. At first, the beginners had been called "The Invertebrates." In the Salon of 1905 they were named "The Incoherents." But by 1906, when they grew more perfervid, more audacious, more crazed with theories, they received their present appellation of "Les Fauves"—the Wild Beasts. And so, and so, a-hunting I would go!
604:. The background and foreground have become one. The only devices that indicate depth are (1) elevation in the picture plane; lower is closer and further is higher, and (2) objects in front of others obscure the object in the background, such as the central nude appears in front of the nude she holds with her right hand. 333:
aspect of the works. The simplification of representational form gave way to a new complexity; the subject matter of the paintings progressively became dominated by a network of interconnected geometric planes, the distinction between foreground and background no longer sharply delineated, and the depth of field limited.
703:, portrayed works by Picasso, Matisse, Derain, Metzinger and others dated before 1909; not exhibited at the 1911 Salon. The article is titled: "The 'Cubists' Dominate Paris' Fall Salon" and subtitled, "Eccentric School of Painting Increases Its Vogue in the Current Art Exhibition - What Its Followers Attempt to Do." 769:
his work suggested with such-and-such an archetype. It would be judged – exclusively – by what distinguished this artist from all the others. The age of the master and pupil was finally over; I could see about me only a handful of creators and whole colonies of monkeys. (Jean Metzinger, Cubism was Born)
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As for Picasso ... the tradition he came from had prepared him better than ours for a problem to do with structure. And Berthe Weil was right when she treated those who compared him/confused him with, a Steinlen or a Lautrec as idiots. He had already rejected them in their own century, a century
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is almost entirely CĂ©zannian, in its color, in its reduction to simplified forms and in its loose brushwork. Picasso still shows a sense of depth perspective through shading, despite some flattening of the surface. Metzinger's painting is less influenced by CĂ©zanne in its brushstrokes, hardly visible
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of our own, wherein our sentiment can work itself out through a juxtaposition of colors. It is hard to explain it, but it may perhaps be illustrated by analogy with literature and music. Your own Edgar Poe (he pronounced it ‘Ed Carpoe’) did not attempt to reproduce Nature realistically. Some phase of
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What’s Metzinger? A scrupulously polite, well-dressed gentleman as ever was, in a scrupulously neat chamber, with a scrupulously well-ordered mind. He is complete as a wax figure, with long brown eyelashes and a clean-cut face. He affects no idiosyncrasies of manners or dress. One cannot question his
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schematic geometric arrangements was the result of an abstracting process not solely based on "axiomatics". These axiomatic abstractions, however, by themselves contain no assertions as to the reality that can be experienced, not in a logical sense deduced from experience, but free inventions of the
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Baigneuses (Bathers), it is apparent that Metzinger was not following the lead of Picasso or Braque in their hermetic approach to painting—he had little interest in imitating, whether it be "an orb on a vertical plane" or anything else—Metzinger was on a path leading to abstraction and to the almost
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Though the school was new to me, it was already an old story in Paris. It had been a nine-days’ wonder. Violent discussions had raged over it; it had taken its place as a revolt and held it, despite the fulmination of critics and the contempt of academicians. The school was increasing in numbers, in
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There were no limits to the audacity and the ugliness of the canvasses. Still-life sketches of round, round apples and yellow, yellow oranges, on square, square tables, seen in impossible perspective; landscapes of squirming trees, with blobs of virgin color gone wrong, fierce greens and coruscating
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It was the search for beauty that had attracted Metzinger to the abstract. Beauty depends not only on geometrical forms or simplified colors, but plainly beauty as it exists in itself. It wasn't just the simple result of a reductive approach to the elements of all the parts. It wasn't either just a
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I wanted an art that was faithful to itself and would have nothing to do with the business of creating illusions. I dreamed of painting glasses from which no-one would ever think of drinking, beaches that would be quite unsuitable for bathing, nudes who would be definitively chaste. I wanted an art
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I had measured the difference that separated art prior to 1900 from the art which I felt was being born. I knew that all instruction was at an end. The age of personal expression had finally begun. The value of an artist was no longer to be judged by the finish of his execution, or by the analogies
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on a surface that is rigorously flat. With this type of illusion other artist of his generation such as Gleizes and Picasso wanted nothing to do. "Quite clearly" Metzinger notes, "nature and the painting make up two different worlds which have nothing in common ..." Already, in 1906, "it could
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They are the product of a reductive abstracting process, of an open, freewheeling process of synthesis—where a dialogue between components lead to the liberation from any particular classical foundation. They are combined harmoniously though pictographic imagery rendered in residuum abstractions of
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was virtually over by the spring of 1907. And by the Salon d'Automne of 1907 it had ended for many others as well. The shift from bright pure colors loosely applied to the canvas gave way to a more calculated geometric approach. The priority of simplified form began to overtake the representational
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The illusion had been maintained up to 1906 or 1907 through the negligence of those whose job it was to clear away the rubbish, but the break was achieved in 1908. No-one would again dare to look at a Puvis de Chavannes or read Balzac. No-one, I mean, among those who walked above the Moulin Rouge,
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In spite of the crazy nature of the "Cubist" theories the number of those professing them is fairly respectable. Georges Braque, AndrĂ© Derain, Picasso, Czobel, Othon Friesz, Herbin, Metzinger—these are a few of the names signed to canvases before which Paris has stood and now again stands in blank
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landscape with vegetation and a small body of water visible through reflections and from the woman on the left whose legs are submerged from the knees down. The central figure holds the trunk of a tree with her left arm and a woman with her right, forming a tight central mass. The two nudes at the
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As one would expect, Metzinger’s concept of painting was both more sophisticated and perceptive than CĂ©zanne, but fundamentally the shape of the misunderstandings that were to follow Cubism were the same as CĂ©zanne's, and so too were the implications. Metzinger had seen painting as rooted in the
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Metzinger once did gorgeous mosaics of pure pigment, each little square of color not quite touching the next, so that an effect of vibrant light should result. He painted exquisite compositions of cloud and cliff and sea; he painted women and made them fair, even as the women upon the boulevards
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But the nudes! They looked like flayed Martians, like pathological charts—hideous old women, patched with gruesome hues, lopsided, with arms like the arms of a Swastika, sprawling on vivid backgrounds, or frozen stiffly upright, glaring through misshapen eyes, with noses or fingers missing. They
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studio on the rue Lamarck to Picasso's Bateau Lavoir studio on the rue Ravignan, writes Metzinger, "the attempt to imitate an orb on a vertical plane, or to indicate by a horizontal straight line the circular hole of a vase placed at the height of the eyes was considered as the artifice of an
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and dislocations of CĂ©zanne’s transformations of nature—with the conceptual aspect of multiple perspectives and non-Euclidean spacetime. The importance of Cubism, he accepted, was to emphasize the idea that everything visible (objects) and invisible (consciousness) has an
707:"Among all the paintings on exhibition at the Paris Fall Salon none is attracting so much attention as the extraordinary productions of the so-called "Cubist" school. In fact, dispatches from Paris suggest that these works are easily the main feature of the exhibition. 418:. Both stances are verbalized with the same abstract vocabulary. In both cases, the figures are camouflaged or blended with the background, their bodies forming part of the landscape. These works were completed at a time when Metzinger frequented the Bateau Lavoir in 324:. Those who had not transited through a Fauve stage, such as Picasso, also experimented with the complex fracturing of form. CĂ©zanne had thus sparked a wholesale transformation in the area of artistic investigation that would profoundly affect the development 539:. He gave informal lectures to the artists, many of whom were passionate about mathematical order. In 1910, Metzinger said of him, " lays out a free, mobile perspective, from which that ingenious mathematician Maurice Princet has deduced a whole geometry". 957: 1267:, The Little Review: Quarterly Journal of Art and Letters, Vol. 9, No. 1: Stella Number, Anderson, Margaret C. (editor), New York: Margaret C. Anderson, 1922–09 (Autumn 1922), Modernist Journals Project, Brown University and the University of Tulsa 547: 438: 43: 530:
in four dimensions projected onto a two-dimensional page. Princet became estranged from the group after his wife left him for André Derain. However, Princet would remain close to Metzinger and participate in meetings of the
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Nearly conscious in someone like Michelangelo, or Paolo Uccello, quite intuitive in painters such as Ingres, or Corot, it works on the basis of numbers which belong to the painting itself, not to whatever it represents.
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dialectic view of everything that led him just as simply to treat each object as opposed to the other, and therefore thoroughly distinct. The blurring of differences was against the entire tenor of the whole.
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apparent mathematical codes. In the case of Metzinger, his prowess in mathematics is well documented. In the case of Picasso, the mathematical association with his paintings has been made through
286: 1296:(Cubism was Born), Présence, Chambéry, 1972. (This text written by Jean Metzinger was supplied to the publisher Henri Viaud by Metzinger's widow Suzanne Phocas). Translation Peter Brooke 567: 902: 641:
Whether in advanced non-objective mathematical workings or abstract geometrical form, along with his non-representative dislocated outward appearance, Metzinger creates a pure image—
883: 395: 695:, which introduced astonished Americans, accustomed to realistic art, to the experimental styles of the European avant garde, including Fauvism, Cubism, and Futurism. The 1911 1007: 610:
In light of the fact that Metzinger frequented the Bateau Lavoir since 1908 and exhibited with Georges Braque at Berthe Weill's gallery, introduced to Picasso by
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life suggested an emotion, as that of horror in ‘The Fall of the House of Ushur.’ That subjective idea he translated into art. He made a composition of it."
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was painted the same year; 1908. The differences between the two paintings suggest that, while Metzinger may have been influenced by Picasso (unlike
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Then the kingdom of the Fauves whose civilization had appeared so new, so powerful, so startling, took on suddenly the aspect of a deserted village.
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interviewed and wrote about artists and artworks in and around Paris. The result of Burgess' investigation was published after he visited the 1910
153:, likely an oil painting on canvas (as practically all Metzingers' works of the period), was painted in a vertical format with unknown dimensions. 1889: 756:
we had no intention of prolonging. Whether or not the Universe was endowed with another dimension, art was going to move into a different field.
490:(and perhaps Galilean relativity) prior to the development of Cubism: something that reflects in his pre-1907 works. The French mathematician 1329: 161:
center, treated in a light color, stand-out against a darker background. They are flanked on both sides by a standing and a sitting nude.
1157:, 1985, Jean Metzinger in Retrospect, The University of Iowa Museum of Art, J. Paul Getty Trust, University of Washington Press, pp. 9-23 800:
had emerged a growing accent on the power of the mind to create for itself, a growing spirit of abstraction, of invention, fabrication.
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and Jean Metzinger. Princet is known as "le mathématicien du cubisme." He brought to the attention of these artists a book entitled
297: 1356: 921: 577:, oil on canvas, 73 x 60 cm, private collection, appears to have certain morphological and stylistic similarities with Metzinger's 2032: 1561: 2600: 1417: 180:, the massive anti-establishment art exhibition in Paris, and one year before the scandalous group exhibition that brought 128:(n. 4243). This black-and-white image of Metzinger's painting, the only known photograph of the work, was reproduced in 2176: 2144: 1521: 1497: 607:
In both paintings, the faces of the models have been left out, featureless, reduced to their simplest spherical form.
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experience of nature: four-dimensional and geometric. He stressed this heavily, and at the same time brought out the
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It was then that Jean Metzinger, joining Picasso and Braque, founded the Cubist City. (Guillaume Apolllinaire, 1913)
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earnestness and seriousness or sincerity. He is, perhaps, the most articulate of them all. Let us not call him prim.
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in 1906, his paintings were exhibited in Paris in the form of several large exhibitions and a retrospective at the
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What do they mean? Have those responsible for them taken leave of their senses? Is it art or madness? Who knows?"
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in his review of the 1910 Salon des Indépendants made a passing and imprecise reference to Metzinger, Gleizes,
202: 1248: 1239:, p. 35, 1985, The University of Iowa Museum of Art, J. Paul Getty Trust, University of Washington Press 316:, CĂ©zanne's geometric simplifications and optical phenomena inspired not just Metzinger, Matisse, Derain and 2096: 2024: 1401: 1349: 1054: 312:
of 1907, greatly affecting the direction taken by the avant-garde artists in Paris. Prior to the advent of
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S. E. Johnson, 1964, Metzinger, Pre-Cubist and Cubist Works, 1900–1930, International Galleries, Chicago
2112: 1553: 1545: 206:, paintings in which the emphasis on simplified geometric form overwhelms representational interests. 2184: 2056: 1513: 177: 125: 2128: 1957: 1734: 1481: 999: 626:), his intention was certainly not to copy or even resemble the Spaniard, as would soon Braque (or 843: 2625: 2615: 2605: 2579: 2500: 2136: 1839: 1759: 1393: 1342: 973: 495: 478:
Metzinger's early interests in mathematics is well documented. He was familiar with the works of
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Agence Photographique de la Réunion des musées nationaux et du Grand Palais des Champs-Elysées
2476: 1433: 615: 189: 630:). His intention was to create his own brand of art, dependent on his own lived experience. 2395: 1779: 1724: 1636: 1449: 336: 184:
to the attention of the general public. At the 1910 Indépendants Jean Metzinger showed his
134: 1573: 618:), and in view of the similarities between the two works, it is probable that Metzinger's 8: 2437: 1992: 1932: 1864: 1774: 1706: 1589: 1409: 1175: 1018: 340: 247: 219: 2506: 2160: 2088: 1489: 783:
which in the first place would appear as a representation of the impossible. (Metzinger)
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Turning his attention to Metzinger's abode, Burgess writes in The Architectural Record:
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painting, now lost or missing, created circa 1908 by the French artist and theorist
2470: 2410: 2328: 2287: 2211: 2203: 2120: 2048: 2002: 1967: 1947: 1894: 1844: 1829: 1608: 1128: 1059:, Société des artistes indépendants: catalogue de la 24Úme exposition, 1908, p. 285 207: 164:
The colors of the painting, as well as its dimensions and whereabouts, are unknown
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be said that a good portrait led one to think about the painter not the model".
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Baigneuses, Deux nus dans un jardin exotique (Two Nudes in an Exotic Landscape)
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The work represents at least four nude women (or bathers) relaxing in a highly
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human mind, abstractions, construed by mathematical means. With works such as
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My conviction was justified: art, that which lasts, is based on mathematics.
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Gelett Burgess, "The Wild Men of Paris: Matisse, Picasso, and Les Fauves",
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Gelett Burgess, "The Wild Men of Paris: Matisse, Picasso, and Les Fauves",
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Aesthetic Meditations, On Painting, The Cubist Painters, Second Series
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Jean Metzinger, October–November 1910, "Note sur la peinture" Pan: 60
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Jean Metzinger, Divisionism, Cubism, Neoclassicism and Post-Cubism
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A travers les salons: promenades aux « IndĂ©pendants Â»
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yellows, violent purples, sickening reds and shuddering blues.
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promoted the work of Poincaré, along with the concept of the
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Both Metzinger's studio on the rue Lamarck and Picasso's
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Jean Metzinger in Retrospect, Pre-Cubist works, 1904–1909
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Leading up to 1910, the draftsman, illustrator and poet
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studio on the rue Ravignan were above the Moulin Rouge.
320:, but the other artists who earlier exhibited with the 972:(Fatata te miti), 67.9 × 91.5 cm (26.7 × 36 in), 778:
illusionistic trickery that belonged to another age."
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and Guillaume Krotowsky (who already signed his works
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which they would never even have thought of entering.
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treatment can be observed, but Metzinger vacates all
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Paysage aux deux figures (Landscape with Two Figures)
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Paysage aux deux figures (Landscape with Two Figures)
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Paysage aux deux figures (Landscape with Two Figures)
915:, oil on canvas, 15 x 19 cm, Private collection 896:, oil on canvas, 33 x 40 cm, Private collection 1482:
Nature morte (Compotier et cruche décorée de cerfs)
873:, oil on canvas, 227 x 193 cm (89.4 x 76 in), 850:, oil on canvas, 64 x 80 cm (25.2 x 31.5 in), 512:
Traité élémentaire de géométrie à quatre dimensions
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defied anatomy, physiology, almost geometry itself!
1242: 1322:Jean Metzinger Catalogue RaisonnĂ© entry page for 1294:Le Cubisme Ă©tait NĂ©: Souvenirs par Jean Metzinger 1131:Albert Gleizes, Chronology of his life, 1881–1953 1124: 1122: 998:, oil on canvas, 66 × 87 cm (26 × 34.3 in), 410:There is a close association between Metzinger's 406:, oil on canvas, 60 x 73 cm, MusĂ©e Picasso, Paris 390: 376:"Instead of copying Nature," says, "we create a 2592: 1466:Man with a Pipe (Portrait of an American Smoker) 1149: 1147: 1145: 1143: 1141: 1139: 1072: 1070: 1068: 1066: 138:, May 1910. The painting was also reproduced in 1119: 683:was reproduced in the 8 October 1911 issue of 1637: 1350: 1208: 1206: 1204: 1202: 1200: 1198: 1136: 1063: 575:Le Viaduc de L'Estaque (Viaduct at L'Estaque) 347:, Museum Kranenburgh, Bergen, the Netherlands 1288: 1286: 1284: 1282: 1280: 1278: 1276: 1274: 1160: 1229: 791:The narrative of Metzinger outlined by his 242:. In the same exhibition hung the works of 2446:The Cubist Painters, Aesthetic Meditations 1644: 1630: 1357: 1343: 1195: 687:. This article was published a year after 659:The "Cubists" Dominate Paris' Fall Salon, 651:total disintegration of recognizable form. 1271: 1107: 1105: 1103: 654: 394: 335: 328:. The Fauvism of Metzinger, Matisse and 285: 188:(the first Cubist portrait according to 167: 1155:Jean Metzinger: At the Center of Cubism 1042: 671: 2593: 1184: 1100: 996:(Mahana no Atua, Te mahana nƍ te Atua) 518:(1903) a popularization of PoincarĂ©'s 1625: 1338: 1418:Colored Landscape with Aquatic Birds 1191:Kubisme.info, Salon des IndĂ©pendants 1022:, oil on canvas, 175 x 241 cm, 2041:Portrait of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler 298:ColecciĂłn Carmen Thyssen-Bornemisza 16:For works with similar titles, see 13: 2177:Still Life with Checked Tablecloth 2145:Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2 1364: 522:. In this book Jouffret described 14: 2637: 1315: 1572: 1386:Two Nudes in an Exotic Landscape 1006: 981: 956: 938: 920: 901: 882: 859: 836: 829: 566: 546: 457: 437: 296:, oil on canvas, 116 x 88.8 cm, 42: 1299: 1256: 1220: 1037:List of works by Jean Metzinger 749:Le Cubisme Ă©tait NĂ©: Souvernirs 733:According to Metzinger, in his 722: 648:By 1908–09, in such studies as 2552:Douglas Cooper (art historian) 2518:Daniel Robbins (art historian) 1169: 1085: 1048: 950:Three Bathers among the Irises 699:article, a review of the 1911 663:, 8 October 1911. Metzinger's 592:in this photograph. Its quasi- 391:Metzinger, Picasso, and Braque 145: 77:Black & white reproduction 1: 691:, and two years prior to the 64: 2033:Portrait of Ambroise Vollard 561:, May 1910, location unknown 452:, May 1910, location unknown 7: 2601:Paintings by Jean Metzinger 2513:Paul Rosenberg (art dealer) 2169:Still Life with Candlestick 1860:Georges Ribemont-Dessaignes 1030: 132:, "The Wild Men of Paris", 10: 2642: 2113:Portrait of Jacques Nayral 1651: 1562:Fruit and a Jug on a Table 1554:Lady at her Dressing Table 1546:Soldier at a Game of Chess 1249:Russell T. Clement, 1994, 726: 589:Landscape with Two Figures 23:Painting by Jean Metzinger 15: 2463: 2429: 2311: 2230: 2195: 2153:The Cathedral (KatedrĂĄla) 2057:Le pigeon aux petits pois 2025:Les Demoiselles d'Avignon 2016: 1915: 1715: 1659: 1600: 1581: 1570: 1372: 1180:, Gil Blas, 18 March 1910 553:Jean Metzinger, c. 1908, 444:Jean Metzinger, c. 1908, 269:Gelett Burgess writes in 232:Village dans les Montagne 97: 89: 81: 73: 60: 50: 41: 33: 28: 1958:Stanton Macdonald-Wright 1263:Guillaume Apolllinaire, 1251:Les Fauves: A sourcebook 1096:, May 1910, p. 412 (PDF) 1000:Art Institute of Chicago 559:The Architectural Record 496:fourth spatial dimension 450:The Architectural Record 290:Jean Metzinger, c.1905, 273:of the same exhibition: 2621:Paintings of Montmartre 2580:Fourth dimension in art 2501:Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler 2137:Les Joueurs de football 1394:Coucher de soleil no. 1 1213:Alex Mittelmann, 2012, 974:National Gallery of Art 186:Portrait of Apollinaire 2611:Proto-Cubist paintings 2541:John Quinn (collector) 1765:Raymond Duchamp-Villon 827: 820: 785: 771: 762: 668: 639: 573:Georges Braque, 1908, 520:Science and Hypothesis 407: 388: 358: 348: 301: 284: 198:Portrait de RenĂ© Arcos 178:Salon des IndĂ©pendants 126:Salon des IndĂ©pendants 2477:Guillaume Apollinaire 844:Jean-HonorĂ© Fragonard 821: 815: 780: 766: 764:Metzinger continues: 753: 689:The Wild Men of Paris 658: 632: 616:Guillaume Apollinaire 464:Pablo Picasso, 1908, 398: 362: 353: 339: 289: 275: 271:The Wild Men of Paris 240:Portrait of Maroussia 190:Guillaume Apollinaire 168:The Wild Men of Paris 1780:Roger de La Fresnaye 1725:Alexander Archipenko 1094:Architectural Record 1079:Architectural Record 1043:Notes and references 751:, Metzinger writes: 667:reproduced top right 555:Baigneuses (Bathers) 498:, to artists at the 488:Jules Henri PoincarĂ© 446:Baigneuses (Bathers) 412:Baigneuses (Bathers) 135:Architectural Record 1993:Alexander Rodchenko 1933:Patrick Henry Bruce 1865:Jeanne Rij-Rousseau 1775:Henri Le Fauconnier 1735:Constantin BrĂąncuși 1707:Henri Le Fauconnier 1410:La danse, Bacchante 1019:Le bonheur de vivre 414:and Picasso's 1908 351:Burgess continues: 341:Henri le Fauconnier 304:After the death of 248:Maurice de Vlaminck 101:Whereabouts unknown 2557:Arthur Jerome Eddy 2105:La Femme aux Phlox 2081:La Femme au Cheval 1998:Nadezhda Udaltsova 1810:Jean Lambert-Rucki 1790:Natalia Goncharova 1458:Woman with a Horse 1176:Louis Vauxcelles, 976:, Washington, D.C. 685:The New York Times 669: 661:The New York Times 408: 349: 302: 236:Femme Ă  l'Ă©ventail 203:L'Arbre (The Tree) 140:The New York Times 2588: 2587: 2454:La Maison Cubiste 2303:Chronophotography 2273:Neo-impressionism 1619: 1618: 1115:, October 8, 1911 1024:Barnes Foundation 643:"the total image" 105: 104: 2633: 2507:LĂ©once Rosenberg 2471:Louis Vauxcelles 2411:Russian Futurism 2329:Cubist sculpture 2288:Symbolism (arts) 2204:Groupe de femmes 2121:Man on a Balcony 2089:Dancer in a cafĂ© 2049:The Accordionist 2003:Marie Vassilieff 1968:Kazimir Malevich 1948:Lyonel Feininger 1898: 1845:Louis Marcoussis 1830:Jacques Lipchitz 1646: 1639: 1632: 1623: 1622: 1609:Man in a Hammock 1576: 1522:Woman with a Fan 1498:Woman with a Fan 1490:Dancer in a CafĂ© 1434:Nu Ă  la cheminĂ©e 1402:Woman with a Hat 1359: 1352: 1345: 1336: 1335: 1310: 1303: 1297: 1292:Jean Metzinger, 1290: 1269: 1260: 1254: 1246: 1240: 1233: 1227: 1224: 1218: 1210: 1193: 1188: 1182: 1173: 1167: 1164: 1158: 1153:Daniel Robbins, 1151: 1134: 1126: 1117: 1109: 1098: 1089: 1083: 1074: 1061: 1055:Jean Metzinger, 1052: 1010: 985: 960: 942: 924: 905: 886: 863: 840: 570: 550: 461: 441: 208:Louis Vauxcelles 69: 66: 46: 26: 25: 2641: 2640: 2636: 2635: 2634: 2632: 2631: 2630: 2591: 2590: 2589: 2584: 2569:Blaise Cendrars 2559:(art collector) 2548:(art collector) 2537:(art collector) 2525:(art collector) 2459: 2425: 2307: 2268:Esprit Jouffret 2263:Maurice Princet 2248:Gustave Courbet 2226: 2191: 2185:Three Musicians 2012: 2008:Marie Vorobieff 1911: 1902:Georges Valmier 1892: 1880:LĂ©opold Survage 1855:Francis Picabia 1815:Marie Laurencin 1805:FrantiĆĄek Kupka 1770:Alexandra Exter 1745:Robert Delaunay 1730:MarĂ­a Blanchard 1711: 1687:Robert Delaunay 1655: 1650: 1620: 1615: 1612:(1913 painting) 1596: 1577: 1568: 1368: 1363: 1318: 1313: 1304: 1300: 1291: 1272: 1261: 1257: 1247: 1243: 1234: 1230: 1225: 1221: 1211: 1196: 1189: 1185: 1174: 1170: 1165: 1161: 1152: 1137: 1127: 1120: 1110: 1101: 1090: 1086: 1075: 1064: 1053: 1049: 1045: 1033: 1026: 1011: 1002: 994:Day of the Gods 986: 977: 961: 952: 943: 934: 925: 916: 906: 897: 887: 878: 867:Gustave Courbet 864: 855: 841: 832: 758: 757: 735:Cubism was Born 731: 725: 701:Salon d'Automne 677: 636: 635: 585: 584: 583: 582: 581: 571: 563: 562: 551: 516:Esprit Jouffret 492:Maurice Princet 476: 475: 474: 473: 472: 462: 454: 453: 442: 428:Maurice Princet 393: 383: 382: 373: 372: 367: 366: 310:Salon d'Automne 280: 279: 260:Kees van Dongen 256:Marie Laurencin 170: 148: 67: 24: 21: 12: 11: 5: 2639: 2629: 2628: 2626:Bathing in art 2623: 2618: 2616:Lost paintings 2613: 2608: 2606:1908 paintings 2603: 2586: 2585: 2583: 2582: 2577: 2572: 2566: 2563:Pierre Reverdy 2560: 2554: 2549: 2546:Leonard Lauder 2543: 2538: 2532: 2526: 2523:Gertrude Stein 2520: 2515: 2510: 2504: 2498: 2497:(poet, critic) 2495:Maurice Raynal 2492: 2486: 2480: 2479:(poet, critic) 2474: 2467: 2465: 2461: 2460: 2458: 2457: 2450: 2442: 2433: 2431: 2427: 2426: 2424: 2423: 2418: 2413: 2408: 2403: 2398: 2396:Constructivism 2393: 2388: 2383: 2378: 2376:Crystal Cubism 2373: 2368: 2363: 2358: 2353: 2348: 2343: 2342: 2341: 2331: 2326: 2321: 2315: 2313: 2309: 2308: 2306: 2305: 2300: 2295: 2290: 2285: 2280: 2275: 2270: 2265: 2260: 2255: 2253:Georges Seurat 2250: 2245: 2240: 2234: 2232: 2228: 2227: 2225: 2224: 2216: 2208: 2199: 2197: 2193: 2192: 2190: 2189: 2181: 2173: 2165: 2157: 2149: 2141: 2133: 2129:Les Baigneuses 2125: 2117: 2109: 2101: 2093: 2085: 2077: 2069: 2061: 2053: 2045: 2037: 2029: 2020: 2018: 2014: 2013: 2011: 2010: 2005: 2000: 1995: 1990: 1988:Morgan Russell 1985: 1980: 1975: 1970: 1965: 1960: 1955: 1950: 1945: 1940: 1935: 1930: 1925: 1919: 1917: 1913: 1912: 1910: 1909: 1907:Jacques Villon 1904: 1899: 1887: 1882: 1877: 1872: 1867: 1862: 1857: 1852: 1850:Jean Metzinger 1847: 1842: 1837: 1832: 1827: 1822: 1817: 1812: 1807: 1802: 1800:Auguste Herbin 1797: 1792: 1787: 1785:Albert Gleizes 1782: 1777: 1772: 1767: 1762: 1757: 1755:Marcel Duchamp 1752: 1750:Sonia Delaunay 1747: 1742: 1737: 1732: 1727: 1721: 1719: 1713: 1712: 1710: 1709: 1704: 1702:Marcel Duchamp 1699: 1694: 1689: 1684: 1682:Albert Gleizes 1679: 1677:Jean Metzinger 1674: 1672:Georges Braque 1669: 1663: 1661: 1657: 1656: 1649: 1648: 1641: 1634: 1626: 1617: 1616: 1614: 1613: 1604: 1602: 1598: 1597: 1595: 1594: 1585: 1583: 1579: 1578: 1571: 1569: 1567: 1566: 1558: 1550: 1542: 1534: 1526: 1518: 1510: 1502: 1494: 1486: 1478: 1470: 1462: 1454: 1446: 1438: 1430: 1422: 1414: 1406: 1398: 1390: 1382: 1376: 1374: 1370: 1369: 1366:Jean Metzinger 1362: 1361: 1354: 1347: 1339: 1333: 1332: 1327: 1317: 1316:External links 1314: 1312: 1311: 1298: 1270: 1255: 1241: 1228: 1219: 1194: 1183: 1168: 1159: 1135: 1129:Peter Brooke, 1118: 1113:New York Times 1099: 1084: 1062: 1046: 1044: 1041: 1040: 1039: 1032: 1029: 1028: 1027: 1012: 1005: 1003: 987: 980: 978: 962: 955: 953: 944: 937: 935: 926: 919: 917: 907: 900: 898: 888: 881: 879: 865: 858: 856: 842: 835: 831: 828: 727:Main article: 724: 721: 720: 719: 715: 714: 709: 708: 697:New York Times 676: 673:New York Times 670: 624:Albert Gleizes 602:depth of field 572: 565: 564: 552: 545: 544: 543: 542: 541: 508:Marcel Duchamp 463: 456: 455: 443: 436: 435: 434: 433: 432: 392: 389: 264:Henri Rousseau 194:Albert Gleizes 174:Gelett Burgess 169: 166: 147: 144: 130:Gelett Burgess 122:Jean Metzinger 103: 102: 99: 95: 94: 91: 87: 86: 83: 79: 78: 75: 71: 70: 62: 58: 57: 55:Jean Metzinger 52: 48: 47: 39: 38: 31: 30: 22: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 2638: 2627: 2624: 2622: 2619: 2617: 2614: 2612: 2609: 2607: 2604: 2602: 2599: 2598: 2596: 2581: 2578: 2576: 2573: 2570: 2567: 2564: 2561: 2558: 2555: 2553: 2550: 2547: 2544: 2542: 2539: 2536: 2533: 2530: 2527: 2524: 2521: 2519: 2516: 2514: 2511: 2508: 2505: 2502: 2499: 2496: 2493: 2490: 2487: 2484: 2481: 2478: 2475: 2472: 2469: 2468: 2466: 2462: 2456: 2455: 2451: 2448: 2447: 2443: 2440: 2439: 2435: 2434: 2432: 2428: 2422: 2419: 2417: 2414: 2412: 2409: 2407: 2404: 2402: 2399: 2397: 2394: 2392: 2389: 2387: 2384: 2382: 2379: 2377: 2374: 2372: 2369: 2367: 2364: 2362: 2359: 2357: 2354: 2352: 2351:Orphism (art) 2349: 2347: 2344: 2340: 2337: 2336: 2335: 2332: 2330: 2327: 2325: 2324:Cubo-Futurism 2322: 2320: 2317: 2316: 2314: 2310: 2304: 2301: 2299: 2296: 2294: 2291: 2289: 2286: 2284: 2281: 2279: 2276: 2274: 2271: 2269: 2266: 2264: 2261: 2259: 2256: 2254: 2251: 2249: 2246: 2244: 2241: 2239: 2236: 2235: 2233: 2229: 2222: 2221: 2217: 2214: 2213: 2209: 2206: 2205: 2201: 2200: 2198: 2194: 2187: 2186: 2182: 2179: 2178: 2174: 2171: 2170: 2166: 2163: 2162: 2158: 2155: 2154: 2150: 2147: 2146: 2142: 2139: 2138: 2134: 2131: 2130: 2126: 2123: 2122: 2118: 2115: 2114: 2110: 2107: 2106: 2102: 2099: 2098: 2097:L'Oiseau bleu 2094: 2091: 2090: 2086: 2083: 2082: 2078: 2075: 2074: 2070: 2067: 2066: 2062: 2059: 2058: 2054: 2051: 2050: 2046: 2043: 2042: 2038: 2035: 2034: 2030: 2027: 2026: 2022: 2021: 2019: 2015: 2009: 2006: 2004: 2001: 1999: 1996: 1994: 1991: 1989: 1986: 1984: 1981: 1979: 1978:Lyubov Popova 1976: 1974: 1971: 1969: 1966: 1964: 1961: 1959: 1956: 1954: 1951: 1949: 1946: 1944: 1941: 1939: 1936: 1934: 1931: 1929: 1926: 1924: 1923:Giacomo Balla 1921: 1920: 1918: 1914: 1908: 1905: 1903: 1900: 1896: 1891: 1890:Henry Valensi 1888: 1886: 1883: 1881: 1878: 1876: 1875:Gino Severini 1873: 1871: 1868: 1866: 1863: 1861: 1858: 1856: 1853: 1851: 1848: 1846: 1843: 1841: 1840:Jean Marchand 1838: 1836: 1833: 1831: 1828: 1826: 1825:Fernand LĂ©ger 1823: 1821: 1820:Henri Laurens 1818: 1816: 1813: 1811: 1808: 1806: 1803: 1801: 1798: 1796: 1793: 1791: 1788: 1786: 1783: 1781: 1778: 1776: 1773: 1771: 1768: 1766: 1763: 1761: 1760:Pierre Dumont 1758: 1756: 1753: 1751: 1748: 1746: 1743: 1741: 1738: 1736: 1733: 1731: 1728: 1726: 1723: 1722: 1720: 1718: 1714: 1708: 1705: 1703: 1700: 1698: 1697:Fernand LĂ©ger 1695: 1693: 1690: 1688: 1685: 1683: 1680: 1678: 1675: 1673: 1670: 1668: 1667:Pablo Picasso 1665: 1664: 1662: 1658: 1654: 1647: 1642: 1640: 1635: 1633: 1628: 1627: 1624: 1611: 1610: 1606: 1605: 1603: 1599: 1592: 1591: 1587: 1586: 1584: 1580: 1575: 1564: 1563: 1559: 1556: 1555: 1551: 1548: 1547: 1543: 1540: 1539: 1538:Man with Pipe 1535: 1532: 1531: 1527: 1524: 1523: 1519: 1516: 1515: 1514:The Blue Bird 1511: 1508: 1507: 1503: 1500: 1499: 1495: 1492: 1491: 1487: 1484: 1483: 1479: 1476: 1475: 1471: 1468: 1467: 1463: 1460: 1459: 1455: 1452: 1451: 1447: 1444: 1443: 1439: 1436: 1435: 1431: 1428: 1427: 1423: 1420: 1419: 1415: 1412: 1411: 1407: 1404: 1403: 1399: 1396: 1395: 1391: 1388: 1387: 1383: 1381: 1380:List of works 1378: 1377: 1375: 1371: 1367: 1360: 1355: 1353: 1348: 1346: 1341: 1340: 1337: 1331: 1328: 1326: 1325: 1320: 1319: 1308: 1307:Bateau Lavoir 1302: 1295: 1289: 1287: 1285: 1283: 1281: 1279: 1277: 1275: 1268: 1266: 1259: 1253: 1252: 1245: 1238: 1235:Joann Moser, 1232: 1223: 1217: 1216: 1209: 1207: 1205: 1203: 1201: 1199: 1192: 1187: 1181: 1179: 1172: 1163: 1156: 1150: 1148: 1146: 1144: 1142: 1140: 1133: 1132: 1125: 1123: 1116: 1114: 1108: 1106: 1104: 1097: 1095: 1088: 1082: 1080: 1073: 1071: 1069: 1067: 1060: 1058: 1051: 1047: 1038: 1035: 1034: 1025: 1021: 1020: 1015: 1014:Henri Matisse 1009: 1004: 1001: 997: 995: 990: 984: 979: 975: 971: 970: 965: 959: 954: 951: 947: 941: 936: 933: 932:Three Bathers 929: 928:Émile Bernard 923: 918: 914: 910: 904: 899: 895: 891: 885: 880: 877:, Montpellier 876: 872: 868: 862: 857: 853: 849: 845: 839: 834: 833: 830:Related works 826: 825: 819: 814: 812: 807: 801: 799: 794: 789: 784: 779: 776: 770: 765: 761: 752: 750: 745: 742: 741: 736: 730: 717: 716: 711: 710: 706: 705: 704: 702: 698: 694: 690: 686: 682: 674: 666: 662: 657: 653: 652: 646: 644: 638: 631: 629: 625: 621: 617: 613: 608: 605: 603: 599: 595: 590: 580: 576: 569: 560: 556: 549: 540: 538: 534: 529: 525: 521: 517: 513: 509: 505: 501: 500:Bateau-Lavoir 497: 493: 489: 485: 481: 471: 467: 460: 451: 447: 440: 431: 429: 423: 421: 417: 413: 405: 401: 400:Pablo Picasso 397: 387: 384: 379: 374: 368: 361: 357: 352: 346: 342: 338: 334: 331: 327: 323: 319: 315: 311: 307: 299: 295: 294: 288: 283: 274: 272: 267: 265: 261: 257: 253: 249: 245: 244:Henri Matisse 241: 237: 234:, along with 233: 229: 225: 221: 220:Le Fauconnier 217: 213: 209: 205: 204: 199: 195: 191: 187: 183: 179: 175: 165: 162: 159: 154: 152: 143: 141: 137: 136: 131: 127: 123: 119: 115: 111: 110: 100: 96: 92: 88: 84: 80: 76: 72: 63: 59: 56: 53: 49: 45: 40: 37: 32: 27: 19: 2535:Wilhelm Uhde 2531:(art dealer) 2529:Berthe Weill 2509:(art dealer) 2503:(art dealer) 2483:AndrĂ© Salmon 2452: 2444: 2438:Du "Cubisme" 2436: 2416:Ego-Futurism 2356:Abstract art 2334:Czech Cubism 2319:Section d'Or 2298:Proto-Cubism 2243:Paul Gauguin 2238:Paul CĂ©zanne 2218: 2210: 2202: 2183: 2175: 2167: 2159: 2151: 2143: 2135: 2127: 2119: 2111: 2103: 2095: 2087: 2079: 2071: 2065:La Coiffeuse 2063: 2055: 2047: 2039: 2031: 2023: 1983:Diego Rivera 1963:August Macke 1953:El Lissitzky 1928:Alice Bailly 1870:Diego Rivera 1795:Henri Hayden 1740:Joseph Csaky 1717:Section d'Or 1607: 1590:Du "Cubisme" 1588: 1560: 1552: 1544: 1536: 1528: 1520: 1512: 1506:Au VĂ©lodrome 1504: 1496: 1488: 1480: 1472: 1464: 1456: 1448: 1440: 1432: 1425: 1424: 1416: 1408: 1400: 1392: 1384: 1323: 1301: 1293: 1264: 1258: 1250: 1244: 1236: 1231: 1222: 1214: 1186: 1177: 1171: 1162: 1154: 1130: 1112: 1093: 1087: 1078: 1056: 1050: 1017: 992: 989:Paul Gauguin 967: 964:Paul Gauguin 949: 931: 912: 909:Paul CĂ©zanne 893: 890:Paul CĂ©zanne 870: 847: 823: 822: 816: 810: 805: 802: 797: 792: 790: 786: 781: 772: 767: 763: 754: 748: 746: 740:trompe-l'Ɠil 738: 734: 732: 729:Proto-Cubism 723:Proto-Cubism 696: 688: 684: 680: 679:Metzinger's 678: 672: 664: 660: 649: 647: 642: 640: 633: 627: 619: 609: 606: 588: 586: 578: 574: 558: 554: 533:Section d'Or 526:and complex 519: 511: 477: 469: 465: 449: 445: 424: 415: 411: 409: 403: 385: 377: 375: 369: 363: 359: 354: 350: 344: 306:Paul CĂ©zanne 303: 291: 276: 270: 268: 239: 235: 231: 227: 226:landscapes: 223: 201: 197: 185: 171: 163: 155: 150: 149: 139: 133: 118:Proto-Cubist 113: 108: 107: 106: 35: 2575:Armory Show 2449:(1913 book) 2441:(1912 book) 2386:Suprematism 2361:Synchromism 2339:Rondocubism 2283:Divisionism 2278:Pointillism 2258:Paul Signac 2100:(Metzinger) 2092:(Metzinger) 2084:(Metzinger) 2076:(Metzinger) 1938:Carlo CarrĂ  1893: [ 1835:AndrĂ© Lhote 1016:, 1905–06, 946:Paul Ranson 892:, c. 1870, 875:MusĂ©e Fabre 871:The Bathers 848:The Bathers 818:(Metzinger) 693:Armory Show 345:Ploumanac'h 224:Ploumanac'h 196:showed his 146:Description 68: 1908 18:The Bathers 2595:Categories 2346:Die BrĂŒcke 2312:Influenced 2231:Influences 2196:Sculptures 1973:Franz Marc 1601:Portrayals 1474:The Harbor 1324:Baigneuses 1081:, May 1910 969:By the Sea 852:The Louvre 775:Montmartre 713:amazement. 681:Baigneuses 665:Baigneuses 628:visa versa 587:Picasso's 524:hypercubes 420:Montmartre 326:modern art 252:Raoul Dufy 151:Baigneuses 114:Baigneuses 90:Dimensions 36:Baigneuses 2489:Max Jacob 2421:Vorticism 2188:(Picasso) 2148:(Duchamp) 2140:(Gleizes) 2132:(Gleizes) 2124:(Gleizes) 2116:(Gleizes) 2108:(Gleizes) 2073:Le goĂ»ter 2068:(Picasso) 2060:(Picasso) 2052:(Picasso) 2044:(Picasso) 2036:(Picasso) 2028:(Picasso) 2017:Paintings 1943:Paul Klee 1692:Juan Gris 1549:(1914–15) 1525:(c. 1913) 1517:(1912–13) 1485:(1911–12) 1477:(1911–12) 1469:(1911–12) 1461:(1911–12) 1445:(1910–11) 1442:Two Nudes 1429:(c. 1908) 1421:(c. 1907) 1413:(c. 1906) 1405:(c. 1906) 1397:(c. 1906) 1389:(1905–06) 1373:Paintings 1057:Baigneuse 911:1876–77, 773:From his 612:Max Jacob 598:Symbolist 528:polyhedra 504:Max Jacob 112:(French: 2485:(critic) 2473:(critic) 2406:Art Deco 2401:De Stijl 2371:Futurism 2212:Danseuse 2161:The City 1582:Writings 1530:En Canot 1450:Tea Time 1031:See also 991:, 1894, 966:, 1892, 948:, 1890, 930:, 1890, 869:, 1853, 846:, 1765, 806:flatness 402:, 1908, 343:, 1908, 228:Le Ravin 212:Delaunay 158:abstract 98:Location 85:Painting 34:French: 2464:Related 2430:Related 2293:Fauvism 2223:(Csaky) 2215:(Csaky) 2207:(Csaky) 2172:(LĂ©ger) 2164:(LĂ©ger) 2156:(Kupka) 1660:Leaders 1426:Bathers 913:Bathers 894:Bathers 854:, Paris 798:Bathers 793:Bathers 747:In his 620:Bathers 579:Bathers 537:Puteaux 484:Riemann 470:Bathers 300:, Spain 116:) is a 109:Bathers 93:Unknown 29:Bathers 2571:(poet) 2565:(poet) 2491:(poet) 2381:Purism 2366:Tubism 2180:(Gris) 1916:Others 1885:Tobeen 1653:Cubism 1593:(1912) 1565:(1916) 1557:(1916) 1541:(1913) 1533:(1913) 1509:(1912) 1501:(1912) 1493:(1912) 1453:(1911) 1437:(1910) 675:, 1911 378:milieu 330:Derain 322:Fauves 318:Braque 314:Cubism 182:Cubism 82:Medium 51:Artist 1897:] 596:post- 594:Nabis 480:Gauss 216:LĂ©ger 2391:Dada 2220:Head 486:and 262:and 238:and 230:and 218:and 200:and 74:Type 61:Year 535:in 514:by 192:); 2597:: 1895:fr 1273:^ 1197:^ 1138:^ 1121:^ 1102:^ 1065:^ 645:. 506:, 482:, 430:. 266:. 258:, 254:, 250:, 246:, 214:, 65:c. 1645:e 1638:t 1631:v 1358:e 1351:t 1344:v 811:n 20:.

Index

The Bathers

Jean Metzinger
Proto-Cubist
Jean Metzinger
Salon des Indépendants
Gelett Burgess
Architectural Record
abstract
Gelett Burgess
Salon des Indépendants
Cubism
Guillaume Apollinaire
Albert Gleizes
L'Arbre (The Tree)
Louis Vauxcelles
Delaunay
LĂ©ger
Le Fauconnier
Henri Matisse
Maurice de Vlaminck
Raoul Dufy
Marie Laurencin
Kees van Dongen
Henri Rousseau

Baigneuses, Deux nus dans un jardin exotique (Two Nudes in an Exotic Landscape)
ColecciĂłn Carmen Thyssen-Bornemisza
Paul CĂ©zanne
Salon d'Automne

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