Yves Tanguy

Yves Tanguy

Yves Tanguy, Indefinite Divisibility, 1942
Born (1900-01-05)January 5, 1900
Paris, France
Died January 15, 1955(1955-01-15) (aged 55)
Woodbury, Connecticut
Nationality French & American
Known for Painting
Movement Surrealism
Patron(s) Pierre Matisse

Raymond Georges Yves Tanguy (January 5, 1900 January 15, 1955), known as Yves Tanguy, was a French surrealist painter.

Biography

Tanguy, the son of a retired navy captain, was born at the Ministry of Naval Affairs on Place de la Concorde in Paris, France.[1] His parents were both of Breton origin. After his father's death in 1908, his mother moved back to her native Locronan, Finistère, and he ended up spending much of his youth living with various relatives.

In 1918, Tanguy briefly joined the merchant navy before being drafted into the Army, where he befriended Jacques Prévert. At the end of his military service in 1922, he returned to Paris, where he worked various odd jobs. He stumbled upon a painting by Giorgio de Chirico and was so deeply impressed he resolved to become a painter himself in spite of his complete lack of formal training.[2]

Tanguy had a habit of being completely absorbed by the current painting he was working on. This way of creating artwork may have been due to his very small studio which only had enough room for one wet piece.

Through his friend Prévert, in around 1924 Tanguy was introduced into the circle of surrealist artists around André Breton. Tanguy quickly began to develop his own unique painting style, giving his first solo exhibition in Paris in 1927, and marrying his first wife later that same year. During this busy time of his life, Breton gave Tanguy a contract to paint 12 pieces a year. With his fixed income, he painted less and ended up creating only eight works of art for Breton.

In December 1930, at an early screening of Buñuel and Dali's L'Age d'Or, right-wing activists went to the lobby of the cinema where the film was being screened, and destroyed art works by Dalí, Joan Miró, Man Ray, Tanguy, and others.

Throughout the 1930s, Tanguy adopted the bohemian lifestyle of the struggling artist with gusto, leading eventually to the failure of his first marriage. He had an intense affair with Peggy Guggenheim in 1938 when he went to London with his wife Jeannette Ducroq to hang his first retrospective exhibition in Britain at her gallery Guggenheim Jeune. The exhibition was a great success and Guggenheim wrote in her autobiography that "Tanguy found himself rich for the first time in his life". She purchased his pictures Toilette de L'Air and The Sun in Its Jewel Case (Le Soleil dans son écrin)[3] for her collection. Tanguy also painted Peggy two beautiful earrings.[4] The affair continued in both London and Paris and only finished when Tanguy met a fellow Surrealist artist who would become his second wife.[5]

In 1938, after seeing the work of fellow artist Kay Sage, Tanguy began a relationship with her that would eventually lead to his second marriage. With the outbreak of World War II, Sage moved back to her native New York, and Tanguy, judged unfit for military service, followed her. He would spend the rest of his life in the United States. Sage and Tanguy were married in Reno, Nevada on August 17, 1940. Toward the end of the war, the couple moved to Woodbury, Connecticut, converting an old farmhouse into an artists' studio. They spent the rest of their lives there. In 1948, he became a naturalized citizen of the United States.

In January 1955, Tanguy suffered a fatal stroke at Woodbury. His body was cremated and his ashes preserved until Sage's death in 1963. Later, his ashes were scattered by his friend Pierre Matisse on the beach at Douarnenez in his beloved Brittany, together with those of his wife.[6]

Style and legacy

Yves Tanguy, Mama, Papa is Wounded! (1927) Museum of Modern Art [7]

Tanguy's paintings have a unique, immediately recognizable style of nonrepresentational surrealism. They show vast, abstract landscapes, mostly in a tightly limited palette of colors, only occasionally showing flashes of contrasting color accents. Typically, these alien landscapes are populated with various abstract shapes, sometimes angular and sharp as shards of glass, sometimes with an intriguingly organic look to them, like giant amoebae suddenly turned to stone.

According to Nathalia Brodskaïa, Mama, Papa is Wounded! (1927) is one of Tanguy's most impressive paintings. He took the title of this and other works from psychiatric textbooks: "I remember spending a whole afternoon with ... [André Breton]," he said, "leafing through books on psychiatry in the search for statements of patients which could be used as titles for paintings." Brodskaïa writes that the painting reflects his debt to Giorgio de Chirico – falling shadows and a classical torso – and conjures up a sense of doom: the horizon, the emptiness of the plain, the solitary plant, the smoke, the helplessness of the small figures. Tanguy said that it was an image he saw entirely in his imagination before starting to paint it.[8]

Tanguy's style was an important influence on several younger painters, such as Roberto Matta, Wolfgang Paalen, and Esteban Francés, who adopted a Surrealist style in the 1930s.[9] Later, Tanguy's paintings (and, less directly, those of de Chirico) influenced the style of the French animated movie Le Roi et l'oiseau, by Paul Grimault and Prévert.[10]

Partial list of paintings

1920s

1930s

1940s

1950s

References

  1. Schalhorn 2001, p. 211.
  2. Schalhorn 2001, p. 212.
  3. Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice
  4. Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice
  5. Out of this Century: Confessions of an Art Addict, Peggy Guggenheim, published by Andre Deutsch, London. 2005, pp179-189
  6. John Russell, Matisse, Father & Son, p.210, published by Harry N. Abrams, NYC. Copyright John Russell 1999, ISBN 0-8109-4378-6
  7. MoMA
  8. Nathalia Brodskaïa, Surrealism, Parkstone International, 2012, p. 123.
  9. José Pierre, "Yves Tanguy", Oxford Art Online. Retrieved July 20, 2012.
  10. Martini, Paola; Pascale Ramel (12 December 2007). "Quelques propositions d'activités – "Le roi et l'oiseau"" [Some proposals for activities - "The King and the Mockingbird"] (PDF) (in French). artsvisuels.ia94.ac-creteil.fr. p. 4. Archived from the original on 10 July 2012.

Bibliography

  • Schalhorn, Andreas (2001). "Yves Tanguy 1900–55". In Karin von Maur. Yves Tanguy and Surrealism. Hatje Cantz. ISBN 3-7757-0968-1. 

Books about Yves Tanguy

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