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The Birds (painting)

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The Birds or The Two Birds (French: Les Oiseaux) is a monumental 1952–1953 ceiling painting by Georges Braque in the Salle Henri II in the Louvre, which had to be renovated at that time. He was commissioned by Georges Salles, director of the museums of France. It was unveiled in 1953. The artist succeeded in scaling an intimate theme dear to him up to a monumental scale. He resolved the problem posed by the vast canvas by using large blocks of colour, giving the work as a whole strength and simplicity.[1]

Birds in Braque's work

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Production

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It was an enormous task for the painter who was then seventy years old. Braque examined the place at length and declared that he would decide whether to accept the commission only after asking his wife's opinion. Although Madame Braque advised that he was much too old to start making ceilings, Braque ultimately declared himself ready to do the decoration.[2] Reconnecting with his first job as a painter and decorator, Georges Braque announced the chosen theme and the compensation he would require. Braque's price was accepted immediately, but Georges Salles questioned the novelty of the motif—he had hoped for a "tailor-made Braque" which the painter did not want. Braque remained firm and first created several models to define his colors. He directedhis assistant Pierre Pallut climb to the top of a large ladder with pieces of sky to judge the chromatic effect.[3]

The models were then reproduced on large canvases which constitute the decorative panels. These models were gouaches on paper, part of which was presented at the Georges Braque 2013 exhibition at the Galeries nationales du Grand Palais, Paris. Several options were studied by the artist. Study for the ceiling of the Louvre, 1953, gouache on paper, with a single bird on a yellow and blue background 20.4 by 13.6 centimetres (8.0 in × 5.4 in), Study for the ceiling of the Louvre, 1953, gouache on paper, with a single bird on a yellow background, 21 by 13.6 centimetres (8.3 in × 5.4 in) with two black birds outlined in yellow on a blue background, Study for the ceiling of the Louvre, 1953, gouache on paper, with two black birds surrounded by white on a blue background, and the appearance of two stars and the crescent moon 21 by 27 centimetres (8.3 in × 10.6 in). These three studies are at the fr:Musées de Belfort,[4] donated by Maurice Jardot.[5]

Three other studies, all entitled Study for the ceiling of the Louvre 1, 2 and 3, are part of a private collection. They are identical in size: 30 by 18.5 centimetres (11.8 in × 7.3 in). Study 3 is dedicated to Georges Salles and dated January 4, 1953, it has neither moon nor star and one of the birds is blue on a lighter blue background. Study 2 is close to the final painting with stars and moon, the first presents a single bird on a white and blue background[6]

Reception

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Bibliography

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  • Collectif RMN (2013). Braque, l'expo. Paris: Réunion des musées nationaux et du Grand Palais des Champs-Élysées. ISBN 978-2-7118-6109-5. Catalogue of the exhibition in the Galeries nationales du Grand Palais (Paris) in partnership with the Centre Pompidou, Paris, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), Houston, Texas.
  • Danchev, Alex (2013). Georges Braque, le défi silencieux (in French). Éditions Hazan. ISBN 978-2-7541-0701-3. (First edition, 2005, Penguin Books, in English; translated into French by Jean-François Allain.)
  • Ferrier, Jean-Louis; Le Pichon, Yann (1988). L'Aventure de l'art au xxe siècle (in French). Préface by Pontus Hultén. Paris: Chêne-Hachette. ISBN 2-85108-509-3.
  • (in French) Nicole Worms de Romilly, Braque, le cubisme : fin 1907-1914, Paris, Adrien Maeght, 1982, 308 p. (ISBN 2-85587-100-X)
  • (in French) André Verdet, Georges Braque, Éditions Galilée, 1988, 211 p. (ISBN 978-2-7186-0099-4), première édition en 1956, éditeur René Kister, Genève, Suisse
  • (in French) Bernard Zurcher, Braque vie et œuvre, Fribourg, Office du livre, 1988, 315 p. (ISBN 2-09-284742-2)
  • (in Italian) Jean Leymarie, Braque : f, Genève, Skira-Fabbri, 1967, 134 p.Document utilisé pour la rédaction de l’article

References

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