Mar 1, 2020 By: yunews
Dr. Marnin Young, associate professor and chair of art history at , has contributed an essay entitled 鈥淔茅n茅on鈥檚 Art Criticism鈥 to the catalogue of the exhibition opening soon at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
From the exhibition website:
Felix F茅n茅on (1861鈥1944), an art critic, editor, publisher, dealer, collector, and anarchist, had a wide-ranging influence on the development of modernism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In the late 1880s, he played a key role in defining the new movement known as Neo-Impressionism, a term he coined himself, whose artists, including Paul Signac, used tiny dabs of color that would mix in the eye of the viewer. Over the next five decades, he championed the careers of artists from Georges-Pierre Seurat and Signac to Pierre Bonnard, Henri Matisse, and Amedeo Modigliani. He amassed a renowned collection of paintings by these artists and many others, and he was also a pioneering collector of art from Africa and Oceania.
The exhibition will feature some 160 objects, including major works that F茅n茅on admired, championed, and collected, as well as contemporary photographs, letters, and publications that trace key chapters in his biography. Together these works reveal the profound and lasting legacy of F茅n茅on鈥檚 keen eye and bold, forward-looking vision.
F茅lix F茅n茅on: The Anarchist and the Avant-Garde鈥擣rom Signac to Matisse and Beyond is one of a trio of complementary exhibitions devoted to F茅n茅on that are organized by The Museum of Modern Art, the Mus茅es d鈥橭rsay et de l鈥橭rangerie, Paris, and the Mus茅e du quai Branly-Jacques Chirac, Paris.