During
the course of his long and exceptionally varied artistic
life, Henri Matisse redefined the basic principles of art
and secured a place as one of the masters of the Modern
period.
Born in northern France in 1869, he began painting in
1890 and quickly discarded plans for a law career.
Studying art in Paris, he began to experiment with form
and color, an exploration that flourished over the
ensuing years through painting, sculpture, lithography
and other forms.
Matisse's stature as the most significant artist in the
Paris School by the onset of World War I owed largely to
the influence of Leo and Gertrude Stein and their circle.
Until his death in 1954, he pursued his interest in the
sensual properties of color and his concept of line as a
means to explore shape and space.
(c)1995 Graphique de France |