Balthus “Cats and Girls—Paintings and Provocations”

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

poster for Balthus “Cats and Girls—Paintings and Provocations”

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Balthus is best known for his series of pensive adolescents who dream or read in rooms that are closed to the outside world. Focusing on his finest works, the exhibition will be limited to approximately thirty-five paintings dating from the mid-1930s to the 1950s. Between 1936 and 1939, Balthus painted his celebrated series of portraits of Thérèse Blanchard, his young neighbor in Paris. Thérèse posed alone, with her cat, or with her two brothers. When Balthus lived in Switzerland during World War II, he replaced the forbidding austerity of his Paris studio with more colorful interiors in which different nymphets daydream, read, or nap. The exhibition concludes with images that he created of Frédérique Tison, his favorite model, at the Château de Chassy in the Morvan during the 1950s. Never before shown in public will be the series of forty small ink drawings for Mitsou, in which the eleven-year-old Balthus evoked his adventures with a stray tomcat and which were published by the German poet Rainer Maria Rilke in 1921. This is the first exhibition of the artist’s works in this country in thirty years. Four works belong to the Museum’s collection and the rest—with the exception of several loans from France, England, Switzerland, and Australia—will come from museums and private collections in the United States.

[Image: Balthus (Balthasar Klossowski) (French, Paris 1908–2001 Rossinière). Thérèse, 1938. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Bequest of Mr. and Mrs. Allan D. Emil, in honor of William S. Lieberman, 1987 (1987.125.2). © 2011 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York]

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from September 25, 2013 to January 12, 2014

Artist(s)

Balthus

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