Bernard Buffet, Les trois rigolos (Three funny ones), 1997, Oil on canvas/huile sur toile, 73 x 100 cm, Courtesy Galerie Maurice Garnier. |
Surveying 60 Years of Bernard Buffet, 'Picasso's Successor' |
Bernard Buffet, La passion du Christ: La crucifixion (The Passion of Christ: The Crucifixion), 1951, 280 x 500 cm, Oil on canvas/huile sur toile, Courtesy Galerie Maurice Garnier.
Bernard Buffet, Les oiseaux: La chouette (Birds: The owl), 1959, Oil on canvas/huile sur toile, 240 X 280 cm, Courtesy Galerie Maurice Garnier.
Bernard Buffet, Orang-outan femelle (Female orang-utan), 1997, Oil on canvas/huile sur toile, 162 x 130 cm, Courtesy Galerie Maurice Garnier. |
MMK Museum The exhibition showcases 60 works by Bernard Buffet (1928-1999) stretching across six decades of artistic endeavor. The exhibition is dedicated to an artist who was once feted as being one of France’s most important painters and the legitimate successor of Picasso. As the painter of existentialism and the man who found the images to describe post-War sensitivities, Buffet’s works had a visual presence and renown in West Europe that almost no other painter has achieved since. This immense popularity in the 1950s and 1960s was followed by critics and the institutional art world both rejecting his work most incisively. The vitriolic tone of this rejection intimates that Buffet should be considered someone who was suppressed rather than forgotten. And a knowledge of his oeuvre is usually based on a few themes that thanks to their mass dissemination and popularity have taken deep root in our memories. This limited awareness contrasts sharply with the sheer infinite range of his subject matter and his incredible productivity. He varied his style little through the decades, and later commentators have termed it congealed, frozen, and cold, but with it Bernard Buffet transformed an inconceivable number of themes, be they violent or trivial, into paintings. His oeuvre contains series of works on the Passion of Christ, on Dante’s Divine Comedy, or on the theme of death, just as it does cityscapes, apes and automobiles. Thanks to this unmistakable style, Bernard Buffet emerged as a trademark brand, one also lent expression by his exalted signature. Bernard Buffet quite vehemently insisted on calling himself a painter, not an artist. Art that was not bonded to craftsmanship and mastery was, so he felt, trickery. His traditional view of art and of his role also set him apart from the world of painting that surrounded him in the closing stages of the 20th century, which not infrequently endeavored to salvage something by relying on irony. Unlike this approach, Buffet painted beyond all ironic reservations. His retention of figuration and the traditional themes of the history of painting was (as regards the financial success of the undertaking) considered conservative, not to say reactionary. With his insistence on continuing down the path he had initially embarked on he exposed himself to criticism and the accusation that he merely created kitsch. The one camp considered his brush style anachronistic and repetitive, the other discerned in Buffet’s production and reception strategies a precursor of Pop Art. The way he developed his themes serially, the immense scale of his output, and the mass dissemination of reproductions are the reason we can sense an affinity between him and Warhol who termed Buffet his favorite artist and the last famous painter. The exhibition presents a broad spectrum of this polarizing oeuvre and put it up for renewed discussion. Alongside outstanding early works, such as a famous, large-size crucifixion, there will specifically be examples of the series so characteristic of his work: L‘horreur de la guerre, dating from 1954; Le Cirque painted in 1955; four canvases from the 1984 series L’Automobile; and the complete Jules Verne cycle of Vingt mille lieues sous les mers, produced in 1989. A catalog is being prepared in German, English and French to accompany the exhibition. |
Bernard Buffet, La rascasse (Scorpionfish), 1949, Oil on canvas/huile sur toile, 96 x 97 cm, Courtesy Galerie Maurice Garnier. |