maillolmusée maillolversion anglaiseVieira Da Silva, Keith Haring, Erik Boulatov, Raymond Mason, Pierre BonnardAndré Bauchant, Serge Poliakoff, Rimbert, Giorgio Morandi, Emile GilioliJean-Michel Basquiat, Félix Vallotton, Michel Haas, Frida Kahlo, Diego RiveraOlson, Toulouse-Lautrec, Christian Schad, Kandinsky, Lorquin, MatisseRobert Rauschenberg, Douanier Rousseau, Camille Bombois, Séraphine Louis, Louis VivinRaoul Dufy, Marcel Duchamp, Raymond Duchamp-Villon, Ivan Pougny, Gauguinprimitifs modernes, art moderne, art contemporain, l'abstraction, peinture moderne, art naïf |
From Maillol to Kandinsky...
The Fondation Dina Vierny - Musée Maillol contains, as well as Maillol's oeuvre, many collections of modern art. Dina Vierny never stopped collecting the greatest artists of the 20th century. Maillol's friends, whose works he kept, are found together in a room in which one finds Gauguin, Pierre Bonnard, Odilon Redon, Maurice Denis. Abstraction is represented by Kandinsky, Ivan Pouni and Serge Poliakoff in painting and also by Emile Gilioli in sculpture. Fascinated by that other type of Primitivism represented by Douanier Rousseau's works, Dina Vierny gathered an important collection of modern primitives, around a painting by Douanier Rousseau. Bauchant, Bombois, Rimbert, Séraphine, Vivin, Racoff, Peyronnet, Desnos are regularly exhibited in various group shows. There is also a drawing cabinet made up of works by Degas, Picasso, Suzanne Valadon, Foujita, which enlarges the scope of the rooms of drawings devoted to Henri Matisse and Raoul Dufy. Conceptual art appears first in the Marcel Duchamp room, where the Ready Made and earlier works recall the cursus of one of the most important figures in modern art. Conceptual art continues in works by contemporary artists, such as Ilya Kabakov and his installation entitled : La cuisine communautaire. Russian painters like Eric Bulatov, Oscar Rabine and Vladimir Yankilevsky, are evidence of the interest Dina Vierny took in the Soviet Union's vanguard. The rooms given over to Raymond Duchamp-Villon and Robert Couturier provide an overview of modern sculpture in the permanent collections. |