Alberto Giacometti

(1901-1966)
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See also: "Alberto
Giacometti and the Surrealists"; Surrealism;
Sculptors
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Text
from Edward Lucie-Smith, "Lives
of the Great 20th-Century Artists" "Alberto
Giacometti is, both because of the nature of his work and because of his
close friendship with the philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, the artist most
closely identified with the Existentialist movement. Part of his
art-historical importance springs from his defence of figuration at a
time when the advantage was with abstract art. He was born in October
1901 in Italian-speaking Switzerland and came from an artistic
background - his father, Giovanni, was a well known Post-Impressionist
painter. Alberto was the eldest of four children and was always
especially close to the brother nearest to him in age, Diego. From the
beginning, he was interested in art: As
a child, what I most wanted to do was illustrate stories. The first
drawing I remember was an illustration to a fairy-tale: Snow White in a
tiny coffin, and the dwarfs. "He
remembered his youth as being very happy; he also recalled his own
arrogant self-confidence: 'I thought I could copy absolutely anything,
and that I understood it better than anybody else.' This self-confidence
began to waver in 1919: Once
in my father's studio, when I was eighteen or nineteen, I was drawing
some pears which were on a table - at the usual still-life distance. But
they kept getting smaller and smaller. I'd begin again, and they'd
always go back to exactly the same size. My father got irritated and
said: 'Now start doing them as they are, as you see them. And he
corrected them to life-size. I tried to do them like that, but I
couldn't help rubbing out; so I rubbed them out, and half an hour later
my pears were exactly as small to the millimetre as the first ones. "His
father allowed him a break from school in order to find himself, but
instead of returning to school afterwards, Giacometti went to the School
of Arts and Crafts in Geneva, where he studied with a member of
Archipenko's circle. In May 1920 he went to Venice for the Biennale,
where his father was an exhibitor, and discovered Tintoretto,
who inspired him with a kind of euphoria. But on the way back he visited
Padua, where he discovered Giotto
in the Arena Chapel: 'The frescoes of Giotto gave me a crushing blow in
the chest. I was suddenly aimless and lost, I felt deep pain and great
sorrow.' He made two more visits to Italy in quick succession. During
the second one, an old Dutchman whom he had agreed to accompany, and
whom he in fact scarcely knew, was suddenly taken ill and died. His
death made a great impression on the young Giacometti - he later said it
was the reason why he had always lived provisionally, with as few
possessions as possible: Establishing
yourself, furnishing a house, building up a comfortable existence, and
having that menace hanging over your head all the time - no, I prefer to
live in hotels, cafés, just passing through. "In
1922 Giacometti went to Paris, to study under the sculptor Bourdelle at
the Ecole de la Grande Chaumiére, and in 1925 he and his brother Diego
set up an atelier together. In 1927 he had his first one-man exhibition,
at a gallery in Zurich, and in the same year the brothers moved to the
cramped studios in the rue Hippolyte-Maindron which they were to use for
the rest of Alberto's life. In 1928 he exhibited two sculptures at the
Galerie Jeanne Bucher. These not only sold immediately, but brought
Giacometti into contact with the Paris avant-garde: in particular, he
met Masson and the circle surrounding him. In 1929 he signed a contract
with Pierre Loeb, then the Surrealists' preferred dealer, and this was
followed by an invitation to join the Surrealist
Group. His first one-man show took place in 1932, and set a fashion for
Surrealist objects with symbolic or erotic overtones. Much of
Giacometti's art at this time was influenced by primitive sculpture seen
at the Musée de l'Homme - an influence which was to persist even after
he changed direction as an artist. "Like
many avant-garde artists of the time, Giacometti found himself in a
dilemma. His clientele was a fashionable one, and in addition he
supplemented his income by making decorative objects, in collaboration
with his brother Diego, for the leading decorator Jean-Michel Frank; but
he was keenly aware of the class struggle in France and sympathized with
the underdogs. Louis Aragon, the member of the Surrealist Group with
whom he felt the closest bond of sympathy, reacted to the same tensions
by becoming a committed Communist. Giacometti moved in a different
direction: he gradually separated himself from the Surrealists and
returned (a great heresy) to working from the model - he began with a
series of portrait busts of Diego. Breton did not like this development
and Giacometti was tricked into attending what turned out to be a
Surrealist tribunal. Before the proceedings could be fully started, he
said, 'Don't bother. I'm going,' and turned his back and walked out.
There was no public excommunication, but his friends in the movement
deserted him. "In
the late 1930s his career was repeatedly interrupted - first by an
accident when a car ran over his foot, then by the outbreak of war. In
1941, in wartime Paris, he made very important new friendships, with the
philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir. But as the
Occupation tightened its grip, he moved to Switzerland, arriving in
Geneva on the last day of 1941. He lived and worked in a small hotel
room and supported himself by making furniture and doing interior
decoration work passed on to him by his brother Bruno, who was an
architect. While living in Geneva, he met Annette Arm, whom he later
married. "An
important development in Giacometti's work took place during the war
years. In the period 1935-40 he had worked from the model, and had also
made some paintings; he then began to make heads and standing figures
from memory, but had an experience which paralleled his attempt in his
late teens to draw the still life of pears in his father's studio: To
my terror the sculptures became smaller and smaller. Only when small
were they like, and all the same these dimensions revolted me, and
tirelessly I began again, only to end up, a few months later, at the
same point. "When
he packed up to leave Geneva, his total output while he was there fitted
into half-a-dozen matchboxes. it was only when he returned to Paris
after the war that he found himself able to make sculptures of more
normal dimensions, but now they were tall and thin. He reoccupied his
studio, which was still intact, and shortly afterwards he was rejoined
by Annette. In January 1948 Giacometti's new work was exhibited at the
Pierre Matisse Gallery, New York. The catalogue preface, written by
Sartre, did much to propagate the idea that Giacometti's art was now one
'of existential reality'. From this point his post-war reputation as a
sculptor (the paintings were neglected until the late 1950s) grew
rapidly. He held his first European one-man show of the new work at the
Kunsthalle in Basle in 1950, and his first Paris exhibition since the
war at the Galerie Maeght in 1951. The year 1956 saw a further
development in his work - he was now seized with a desire to produce
paintings which were recognizable likenesses. Each portrait required
many sittings - the business of sitting for Giacometti has been
described in a lively book by James Lord, who stresses the artist's
half-humorous despair at his continual inability to catch precisely what
he wanted. Giacometti himself once said: If
I could make a sculpture or a painting (but I'm not sure I want to) in
just the way I'd like to, they would have been made long since (but I am
incapable of saying what I want). Oh, I see a marvellous and brilliant
painting, but I didn't do it, nobody did it. I don't see my sculpture, I
see blackness. "He
was awarded the major prize for sculpture at the Venice Biennale of
1962, and the award brought with it worldwide celebrity. He was
philosophical about the penalties of fame: I
refused the intrusion of success and recognition as long as I could. But
maybe the best way to obtain success is to run away from it. Anyway,
since the Biennale it's been much harder to resist. I've refused a lot
of exhibitions, but one can't go on refusing forever. That wouldn't make
any sense. In
the 1960s Giacometti's health began to fail. In 1963 he underwent an
operation for cancer of the stomach (he made the curiously
characteristic remark: 'The strange thing is - as a sickness I always
wanted to have this one.'). The cancer did not recur, but in 1965 heart
disease and chronic bronchitis were diagnosed. Giacometti died in June
1966 at the Kantonsspital in Chur, Switzerland." |