2000.323 Jean Metzinger, The Harbor


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Jean Metzinger worked in several styles throughout his career, but he is best known as one of the first artists to practice cubism. The Harbor, one of his largest cubist works, is divided into several vertical panels that depict a busy port from separate points of view. Bright colors and different textures energize the composition, evoking the activity of a commercial harbor.

In addition to painting, Metzinger co-wrote and published the first formal treatise on cubism in 1912, which would greatly influence other artists. Despite Metzinger’s significance, his work has largely been overshadowed by Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso.

Excerpt from
Heather MacDonald, DMA label copy, 2012.


NOTES
Created 1912

Checked Piction

Acquisition Justification:
Jean Metzinger was a seminal player in the Modernist breakthrough known as cubism. THE HARBOR was executed at a time when  Metzinger's notion of cubism had fully crystallized. In 1912 Metzinger and fellow cubist Albert Gleizes published the first treatise on  cubism, thereby articulating a didactic theory, explaining the ambitions of the new pictorial idiom. DU CUBISME remains one of the  most important documentary records of this crucial phase in the history of modernism. Metzinger's willingness to give critical voice to  his own version of cubism distinguishes him from the stubbornly mute Picasso and Braque, both of whom refused to acknowledge  cubism as a method or school. The competing versions of cubism as defined through its 'invention' by Picasso and Braque, or as a multifaceted, group movement, including such artists as Juan Gris, Fernand Leger, the Duchamp-Villon brothers, Jacques Lipchitz,  Robert Delaunay, Gleizes, and Metzinger have yet to be fully reconciled .As pointed out by Dr. Richard Brettell, this painting by  Metzinger may very well prove the artist's independent anticipation, rather than emulation, of the second phase of Picasso and  Braque's experimentation, known as synthetic cubism. The colorful, decorative quality of this urban landscape, its compositional assurance, and witty incorporation of seemingly collaged elements bears a striking resemblance to Picasso's synthetic compositions  of 1913-15. However, very few of Metzinger's paintings can be securely dated. Pending further research, the dae of this painting  cannot be ascertained. It could very well postdate the synthetic works of Braque, Picasso and Juan Gris, the last of whom had a  particular fondness for the compositional bands we see in THE HARBOR. Unlike Picasso and Braque, who tended to remain aloof  from the intellectual currents of avant-garde Paris, Metzinger was in constant dialogue with progressive ideas of social progress and  change. The sheer beauty of this faceted, but still representationally legible, port scene makes this painting a celebration of modern  life. Metzinger's playful assimilation of mass-produced imagery, from the advertising-like cropped letters, to the textile-like patterned  water, reflects his persistent commitment to the idea of painting as decoration. Other important paintings by Metzinger in American  collections include LE GOUTER (1911), Walter Arensberg Collection, Philadelphia Museum of Art), DANCER IN THE CAFE (1912,  Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo) and PORTRAIT OF GLEIZES (1912, Rhode Island School of Design).
 
The addition of THE HARBOR  to the permanent collection cannot have come at a more propitious moment. Following on the heels of the DMA's triumphant  acquisition of the "cubist trilogy" last year, this painting lends an even greater depth of the museum's holding sin this pivotal phase of  high modernism. Its presence enables the DMA to trace a rich narration of cubism and its aftermath, embracing the seminal  contributions of Braque, Picasso, and Gris, the artists of the Section d'Or, the Orphists, the Russian constructivists on through to the  international Abstraction-Creation artists of the 1930s. With Metzinger's HARBOR alongside Leger's THREE WOMEN AND STILL  LIFE, DEJEUNER, Delaunay's EIFFEL TOWER, Lipchitz's BATHER, Gabo's CONSTRUCTED HEAD NO. 2, Mondrian's  SELF-PORTRAIT, as well as the  generous loan of Jellet's CONSTRUCTIVE CONSTRUCTION and Gleizes' STUDY FOR  COMPOSITION OF TWO NUDES, the DMA can boast a rare diversity of cubist-inspired painting and sculpture.

Selected Literature:
Antliff, Mark. "Cubism, Celtism, and the Body Politic." ART BULLETIN, December 1992, pp. 655-668. Cooper, Douglas. CUBIST  EPOCH. Phaidon, London, 1971. Cooper, Douglas and Tinterow, Gary. THE ESSENTIAL CUBISM: BRAQUE, PICASSO & THEIR  FRIENDS 1907-1920. George Braziller, New York, 1983. Golding, John. CUBISM: A HISTORY AND AN ANALYSIS, 1907-1914.  Faber and Faber, London, 1959, pp. 151-161. Moser, Charlotte. Review of the exhibition "Jean Metzinger in Retrospect," organized  by the University of Iowa. ARTnews. May 1986, pp. 116-117. Rosenblum, Robert. CUBISM AND TWENTIETH-CENTURY ART. Harry N. Abrams, New York, 1976. 

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Artist/designers
Metzinger, Jean (French, 1883-1956)

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Place of origin: Paris (France): TGN: 7008038

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Historical periods

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General Description
 
Jean Metzinger worked in several styles throughout his career, but he is best known as one of the first artists to practice cubism. The Harbor, one of his largest cubist works, is divided into several vertical panels that depict a busy port from separate points of view. Bright colors and different textures energize the composition, evoking the activity of a commercial harbor.

In addition to painting, Metzinger co-wrote and published the first formal treatise on cubism in 1912, which would greatly influence other artists. Despite Metzinger’s significance, his work has largely been overshadowed by Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso.

Excerpt from
Heather MacDonald, DMA label copy, 2012.


Fun Facts

Archival Resources

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Notes
Created 1912

Checked Piction

Acquisition Justification:
Jean Metzinger was a seminal player in the Modernist breakthrough known as cubism. THE HARBOR was executed at a time when  Metzinger's notion of cubism had fully crystallized. In 1912 Metzinger and fellow cubist Albert Gleizes published the first treatise on  cubism, thereby articulating a didactic theory, explaining the ambitions of the new pictorial idiom. DU CUBISME remains one of the  most important documentary records of this crucial phase in the history of modernism. Metzinger's willingness to give critical voice to  his own version of cubism distinguishes him from the stubbornly mute Picasso and Braque, both of whom refused to acknowledge  cubism as a method or school. The competing versions of cubism as defined through its 'invention' by Picasso and Braque, or as a multifaceted, group movement, including such artists as Juan Gris, Fernand Leger, the Duchamp-Villon brothers, Jacques Lipchitz,  Robert Delaunay, Gleizes, and Metzinger have yet to be fully reconciled .As pointed out by Dr. Richard Brettell, this painting by  Metzinger may very well prove the artist's independent anticipation, rather than emulation, of the second phase of Picasso and  Braque's experimentation, known as synthetic cubism. The colorful, decorative quality of this urban landscape, its compositional assurance, and witty incorporation of seemingly collaged elements bears a striking resemblance to Picasso's synthetic compositions  of 1913-15. However, very few of Metzinger's paintings can be securely dated. Pending further research, the dae of this painting  cannot be ascertained. It could very well postdate the synthetic works of Braque, Picasso and Juan Gris, the last of whom had a  particular fondness for the compositional bands we see in THE HARBOR. Unlike Picasso and Braque, who tended to remain aloof  from the intellectual currents of avant-garde Paris, Metzinger was in constant dialogue with progressive ideas of social progress and  change. The sheer beauty of this faceted, but still representationally legible, port scene makes this painting a celebration of modern  life. Metzinger's playful assimilation of mass-produced imagery, from the advertising-like cropped letters, to the textile-like patterned  water, reflects his persistent commitment to the idea of painting as decoration. Other important paintings by Metzinger in American  collections include LE GOUTER (1911), Walter Arensberg Collection, Philadelphia Museum of Art), DANCER IN THE CAFE (1912,  Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo) and PORTRAIT OF GLEIZES (1912, Rhode Island School of Design).
 
The addition of THE HARBOR  to the permanent collection cannot have come at a more propitious moment. Following on the heels of the DMA's triumphant  acquisition of the "cubist trilogy" last year, this painting lends an even greater depth of the museum's holding sin this pivotal phase of  high modernism. Its presence enables the DMA to trace a rich narration of cubism and its aftermath, embracing the seminal  contributions of Braque, Picasso, and Gris, the artists of the Section d'Or, the Orphists, the Russian constructivists on through to the  international Abstraction-Creation artists of the 1930s. With Metzinger's HARBOR alongside Leger's THREE WOMEN AND STILL  LIFE, DEJEUNER, Delaunay's EIFFEL TOWER, Lipchitz's BATHER, Gabo's CONSTRUCTED HEAD NO. 2, Mondrian's  SELF-PORTRAIT, as well as the  generous loan of Jellet's CONSTRUCTIVE CONSTRUCTION and Gleizes' STUDY FOR  COMPOSITION OF TWO NUDES, the DMA can boast a rare diversity of cubist-inspired painting and sculpture.

Selected Literature:
Antliff, Mark. "Cubism, Celtism, and the Body Politic." ART BULLETIN, December 1992, pp. 655-668. Cooper, Douglas. CUBIST  EPOCH. Phaidon, London, 1971. Cooper, Douglas and Tinterow, Gary. THE ESSENTIAL CUBISM: BRAQUE, PICASSO & THEIR  FRIENDS 1907-1920. George Braziller, New York, 1983. Golding, John. CUBISM: A HISTORY AND AN ANALYSIS, 1907-1914.  Faber and Faber, London, 1959, pp. 151-161. Moser, Charlotte. Review of the exhibition "Jean Metzinger in Retrospect," organized  by the University of Iowa. ARTnews. May 1986, pp. 116-117. Rosenblum, Robert. CUBISM AND TWENTIETH-CENTURY ART. Harry N. Abrams, New York, 1976. 

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers
Metzinger, Jean (French, 1883-1956)

Cultures

Geography 
Place of origin: Paris (France): TGN: 7008038

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

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*European Art
boats: AAT: 300178749
geometric shape: AAT: 300263819
water: AAT: 300011772
Paris (France): TGN: 7008038
bridges (built works): AAT: 300004829
ships: AAT: 300082981
harbors: AAT: 300008678
masts: AAT: 300000951
Cubist: AAT: 300021495
Metzinger_Jean: ULAN: 500001079
sailing ships: AAT: 300125446
source file
object_notes_2_d-0173.xml.nores