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May 12
1 result(s)
1- Géza Bornemisza, Rue du village, 1911, oil on canvas,
63,5 x 70 cm, Jill A Wiltse and H. Kirk Brown III collection, Denver, Colorado
2- Sándor Ziffer, Paysage d’hiver à la barrière, early 1910's, oil on canvas, 91,5 x 109,3 cm, Hungarian National Galleries collection
3- Vilmos Perlrott Csaba, Rue à Nagybánya, 1909, oil on canvas, 40 x 40 cm, Haas Collection
4- Sándor Ziffer, Vieux pont à Nagybánya, 1908, oil on canvas, 50,5 x 65 cm, Lorenz Czell collection
Set up in collaboration with the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Dijon and the Musée Matisse de Cateau-Cambrésis, the Fauves Hongrois exhibition, presented at the Musée d'Art Moderne de Céret, relies on the 2006 major retrospective at the Hungarian National Gallery in Budapest: Hungarian Fauves, from Paris to Nagybánya, 1904-1914. A selection of 110 paintings and 49 drawings, about half of the 2006 exhibition, draws the portrait of Hungarian fauvism, astride between national tradition and references to the Parisian avant-garde. The exhibition also examines the specifics of the various centers of Hungarian fauvism: Paris, Budapest, and Nagybánya, a tumultuous colony of artists in Transylvania. The works gathered, very rarely shown outside of Hungarian museums and collections, are signed by artists who went mostly unrecognized on the international scene, such as Géza Bornemisza, Béla Czóbel, Sándor Ziffer, Jozsef Rippl-Ronai, Vilmos Perlrott Csaba...
Fauves Hongrois, 1904-1914
June 22 through October 12, 08
Musée d'Art Moderne de Céret
8, Boulevard Maréchal Joffre
66403 Céret Cedex – France
+ 33 (0)4 68 87 27 76
Exhibition page on www.musee-ceret.com (in French only)