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"Paris: capital of the arts 1900-1968"; Royal Academy of Arts, London. (Reviews).


Rarely does such a "major" historical exhibition fail so lamentably la·men·ta·ble  
adj.
Inspiring or deserving of lament or regret; deplorable or pitiable. See Synonyms at pathetic.



lamen·ta·bly adv.
 to account for why its many works were included and why they were ordered in such a way. It is equally rare for a show of such size and ambition, covering a period of extraordinary achievement, to contain so many duds. There were moments here when you had to pinch yourself to make sure you were in the Royal Academy and not at a secondary modern sale at Christie's. But no, you really were in one of the premier exhibition spaces in Britain looking at a show that purported to examine painting and sculpture in Paris during seven decades of tumultuous polyglot pol·y·glot  
adj.
Speaking, writing, written in, or composed of several languages.

n.
1. A person having a speaking, reading, or writing knowledge of several languages.

2.
 creativity.

The curators (Sarah Wilson
This article is about the English impostor. For the 1934 national spelling bee champion from Portland, Maine, go to Scripps National Spelling Bee#Champions and winning words.
 of the Courtauld Institute with the Academy's Norman Rosenthal Sir Norman Rosenthal (born 1944) is a British curator. The child of Jewish refugees from Nazi occupied Europe, Rosenthal grew up in North London. After studying history at the University of Leicester he took a job for an art dealer and for a time was Exhibitions Officer at the  and art historian Ann Dumas) made several questionable decisions, the most obvious being the time span. Why stop at the student riots of 1968, after a low point in French political art? Why begin before Fauvism fauvism (fō`vĭzəm) [Fr. fauve=wild beast], name derisively hurled at and cheerfully adopted by a group of French painters, including Matisse, Rouault, Derain, Vlaminck, Friesz, Marquet, van Dongen, Braque, and Dufy. ? A more manageable and probably more refreshing exhibition might have skipped the first, well-trodden decades and concentrated on the less familiar art in Paris in the second half of the twentieth century, the period in which the city's creativity seemed to dwindle dwin·dle  
v. dwin·dled, dwin·dling, dwin·dles

v.intr.
To become gradually less until little remains.

v.tr.
To cause to dwindle. See Synonyms at decrease.
 rapidly but, as this show intermittently demonstrated, still had some life left. Further, why break the exhibition down to four arrondissements--Montmartre, Montparnasse, Saint-Germain-des-Pres, and the Latin Quarter--when in fact artists were working all over the city? Geography is no substitute for argument. If this structure was meant to give coherence to a bulky ground plan, it actually worked in reverse--you didn't know where you were, as one quart ier dissolved into another. It didn't help that the curators included work made elsewhere in France. Though viewers were told that works not originating in the capital had been excluded, there, in the very first room, was Andre Derain's iconic head of Matisse, 1905, well known as having been painted in Collioure, on the Mediterranean coast. Call me persnickety, say I'm splitting art-historical hairs, but an exhibition as ambitious as this must stick closely to its stated guidelines if it is to maintain any authority.

The first room was exemplary with respect to the gaps that existed between the shopping list (drawn up by Wilson, known for her dense texts rather than any visual acuity visual acuity
n.
Sharpness of vision, especially as tested with a Snellen chart. Normal visual acuity based on the Snellen chart is 20/20.


Visual acuity
The ability to distinguish details and shapes of objects.
) and the goods in the cart at the checkout. It was a dog's dinner presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 meant to demonstrate that in the early 1900S artists of several nationalities working in several styles were living in Paris. Wow! Van Dongen, Matisse, Picasso, Utrillo, Sickert, and Vuillard took a supporting role to the two largest canvases in the space. These, by Marie Laurencin and Suzanne Valadon, fell flat on their faces in a room designed as an overture of dazzling innovation to the supposed symphony that followed. Bonnard, appearing two rooms later, was incredibly poorly represented, by only one work, and it was painted in the South of France South of France south n the South of France → le Sud de la France, le Midi . And there was no sign anywhere of Monet, Renoir, Rodin, or Pissarro, who were visiting Paris from their rural studios in and after 1900 and whose achievements had greatly endorsed the city as artistic capital of the wor ld.

Traveling deeper, the babble of voices in Montmartre gave way to that of Montparnasse. Here and there were very good works--by Leger, Picasso, Arp, Picabia, Soutine--but their potential impressiveness was frequently dulled by shabby neighbors and an often careless hang. The attempted inclusiveness left most topics raw or incomplete. Ellsworth Kelly and Sam Francis stood in for the Americans in Paris, but Edward Hopper and Stuart Davis, who had painted the city at crucial moments in their careers, were absent. British artists were thin on the ground although several lived and worked in Paris. C.R.W. Nevinson was present, along with Marlow Moss, an epigone ep·i·gone  
n.
A second-rate imitator or follower, especially of an artist or a philosopher.



[French épigone, sing.
 of Mondrian, but Ben Nicholson was a glaring omission, Paris having partly provided the impetus for his mid-30s white reliefs.

There is nothing so dispiriting dis·pir·it  
tr.v. dis·pir·it·ed, dis·pir·it·ing, dis·pir·its
To lower in or deprive of spirit; dishearten. See Synonyms at discourage.



[di(s)- + spirit.]

Adj.
 as responding to a work of art on its own terms only to have the curators breathe down your neck and tell you it's only there to show this or that aspect of politics, geography, class, etc., a situation that reaches its nadir in currently chichi thematic exhibitions. As art, for example, Romaine Brooks's portrait of Jean Cocteau against a backdrop of Paris is a feeble, inflated painting; as documentation, it has its point. The privilege given throughout to work by women was not always to the show's advantage. Fortunately, almost by accident, there were illuminating visual moments and passages to be enjoyed without excessive curatorial intervention. We were reminded of how good Pierre Soulages could be; absorbed by the conjunction of works by Soutine and Fautrier and by excellent Picabias; surprised by a revisionary impression of early Niki de Saint Phalle. But in the end it was all too like an overpopulated o·ver·pop·u·late  
v. o·ver·pop·u·lat·ed, o·ver·pop·u·lat·ing, o·ver·pop·u·lates

v.tr.
To fill (an area, for example) with excessive population to the detriment of the inhabitants, resources, or environment.
 parrot house, its colorful inmates outscreeching one another for attent ion.

"Paris: Capital of the Arts 1900-1968" travels to the Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao

Art museum in Bilbao, Spain. It opened in 1997 as a cooperative venture between the Guggenheim Foundation and the Basque regional administration of northwestern Spain.
, May 21-Sept. 3.

Richard Shone, associate editor of the Burlington Magazine, is a frequent contributor to Artfonam.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Shone, Richard
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUFR
Date:May 1, 2002
Words:856
Previous Article:Eva Hesse: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. (Reviews).
Next Article:Norman Rockwell: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. (New York).
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