Always
There
Julian Barnes
§ Georges
Braque: A Life by Alex Danchev
§ Landscape
in Provence 1750-1920 Montréal Musée des Beaux Arts
§ Derain:
The London Paintings Courtauld Institute
They
were friends, companions, painters-in-arms committed to what was, at the start
of the 20th century, the newest and most provoking form of art. Braque was just
the younger, but there was little assumption of seniority by the other. They
were co-adventurers, co-discoverers; they painted side by side, often the same
subject, and their work was at times almost indistinguishable. The world was
young, and their painting lives lay ahead of them.
You
have to feel sorry for Othon Friesz, Braque’s fellow Le Havrean and loyal
confederate in Fauvism, his proto-Picasso. While Braque moved on with his new
Spanish friend to make the greatest breakthrough in Western art for several
centuries, and Cubism relegated Fauvism to a jaunty memory, Friesz had to get
on with the rest of his life and the rest of his career. Strangely, the two
painters had their first joint show – a posthumous one – only last summer, at
the Musée de Lodève. It proved a display of unintentional cruelty. The most
compelling Fauve paintings were all by Braque; but while this was just a stage
in his development (though a fondly remembered one – fifty years later he
bought back his own The Little Bay at La Ciotat),
it turned out to be what Friesz did best. Afterwards, he wandered his way
through various styles inclining more and more to the empty magniloquent
gesture – a painter shouting not to be forgotten.
A
century on, the great adventure of Cubism still retains all its excitement,
whether in the direct narrative of Alex Danchev’s impressive (and first ever)
biography of Braque, or in oblique illustration. Landscape in Provence
1750-1920 seems at first like a nice warm show for a cold Quebec afternoon.
It begins with a century and more of proper professional realism: the artist as
dutiful tourist, recording such popular sites as Fontaine de Vaucluse and the
Gorges d’Ollioules. (One surprisingly popular location was Mont Ste Victoire,
whose forbidding outline gave any number of journeymen painters a conveniently
beaky backdrop for half a century before Cézanne finally saw it as if for the
first time.) When photography comes along in the 1850s, painting is unable to
decide whether it is a rival or a mere useful idiot and tool. Belatedly, it
responds to the monochrome imitator by outbidding it: more colour, not less,
unphotographable colour too – Monet at Antibes, Van Gogh in Arles, Signac and
Cross on the coast. But this activity seems merely diversionary when the
exhibition’s main theme finally sounds: Cézanne, and
form asserting itself over colour, or rather, colour holding itself back in the
service of form. Then instantly from Cézanne to Braque’s famous breakthrough at
L’Estaque: the Viaduct and the Road, which still hold to
Cézanne’s palette, followed by the two astounding pictures of the Rio Tinto
factories, which pitch us into Cubism, where the forms take their final
predominance, the colours become even more muted and subservient. We almost
overlook the other sudden shift: a Provençal ‘landscape’ can be made up of a
sliding, dodging vista of factory roofs.
From
here, it all looks so inevitable: that Braque, returning from L’Estaque, would
combine with Picasso to take the great discoveries forward, and that the words
he scribbled on a visiting card he left with the Spaniard – ‘anticipated
memories’ – were confidently predicting a lifelong association. At the time,
how much less certain it must have seemed: who could tell that Cubism –
mockingly named by its detractors – would not turn out to be one more passing
ism? These new painters were not like their immediate predecessors, who had
tended to overthrow the presiding pictorial conventions, develop their own way
of seeing, and then more or less stick to it. The new gang were constantly,
frenetically metamorphic (and none more so than Picasso). Take the current
small Derain show at the Courtauld: 12 paintings of London, the result of his
1906 visit, which render the city in more flatteringly – indeed, alarmingly –
alive colours than anyone had previously lent it. But the first two are in a
bold neo-Pointillist version of Fauvism, the other ten in a quite different
style, clumpier in form, solider in brushwork. Why should Cubism not also turn
out to be a fleeting phase? How much would it prove to contain?
Not
just the style, but also the personnel. Who was on board, who had signed up
merely for the trip around the bay, and who for the whole voyage? One of the
instructive surprises of the Landscape in Provence show is the power of
early Dufy, whose L’Estaque paintings are just as radical as Braque’s (his Arcades
are a thing of wonder, and the Tileworks and Boats of 1908 have
the hard-hatching of a Picasso nose). What happened to Dufy that he ended up an
artist of mere twirly decorativeness, whose paintings were no improvement on
his postcards? And there were other ways in which Cubism’s voyage might have
ended. Braque was posted missing on the Somme in May 1915; when found, he was
blind. What if this condition had been permanent? What if the hand of the
surgeon who trepanned him had slipped? What if, like his fellow trepanee
Apollinaire, he had survived the operation only to be carried off by the great
influenza epidemic of 1918? Would Picasso, without the comradeship of Braque,
the need to rivalise with him, to fight and overcome, have pursued the course
he did?
Received
art history tends to overlook such shiftingness, the hypotheticals that never
occurred. We also easily forget – and Danchev prompts us well in this regard –
that a great artistic adventure can still be fun. Old artists grow solemn when
fêted by young critics, and may misremember the glee, the jokiness, the risk,
the doubt of their less observed younger days. Cubism was a deeply serious
reinvention of how and what we see; it was, as Picasso told Françoise Gilot, ‘a
kind of laboratory experiment from which every pretension or individual vanity
was excluded’; it was an eventually unsuccessful search for what Braque called
‘the anonymous personality’, whereby the painting would stand by and for
itself, unsigned and self-free. It was all this, and all as high-minded as
this; but it was also personal, playful, companionable. It was Braque teasing
(and delighting) the dressy Picasso by buying him a hundred hats at a public
auction in Le Havre; it was Buffalo Bill and ‘Pard’, as Picasso signed himself;
it was Braque as ‘Wilbourg’, Picasso’s rendering of Wilbur Wright, whose flying
contraption was an analogue (or the other way round) of Braque’s pioneering –
and lost – paper sculptures of 1911-12. It was judging pictures by whether they
fell into the ‘Louvre’ category or the ‘Dufayel’ category (Dufayel being a
department store which sold imitation Henri II sideboards). The latter seems to
have been rather more a term of praise. ‘They want art,’ Picasso was to lament
in later days. ‘One has to know how to be vulgar.’
The
joyful, improvisatory side of Cubism is more evident in Picasso’s work than
Braque’s: in the visual puns, in the jokey sculptures, in the small beach
pictures where the painter simply turns the framed canvas over and works on and
in the back declivity with sand; also in public self-presentation – Picasso at
a restaurant table with bread-rolls for fingers. He never lost this side,
partly because he wanted to do everything and be everything. Braque knew that
he couldn’t do everything, and didn’t want to be everything. He recognised his
technical limitations from early on: his drawing was poor, his figure
representation unsuccessful, his statuary ‘lumpen’.
Too much facility and the artist may fall in love with his own virtuosity; too
little and a ‘Wilbourg’ won’t get off the ground. And even when you
successfully identify your limitations, there is a choice to be made: the
apparently sensible one of trying to eradicate them, and the more radical
approach that Braque adopted, of ignoring them. ‘Progress in art,’ he wrote,
‘does not consist in expanding one’s limitations, but in knowing them better.’
Put more simply: ‘I don’t do as I want, I do as I can.’
He also
had a singular ability not to be distracted by the art he didn’t need in order
to make his own. His masters were Chardin and Corot; he admired Uccello; his
favourite painter was Grünewald – and that was mainly it, for Western art. He
hated the Mona Lisa as many did, for its symbolic ascendancy. On a visit
to Italy, he declared that he had ‘had it up to here’ with the Renaissance –
though there does not seem to be much evidence of previous over-consumption. He
disliked museums, preferring to sit outside and send Mme Braque in to see if
there was anything worth attending to (which sounds like an instruction
inviting the answer no). At times this seems to border on affectation: when the
Tate put on a Braque-Rouault show in 1946, he chose to attend its closing
rather than its opening (or, indeed, any other day).
He
painted. That was what he did. He painted relief without perspective. He
painted forms advancing towards the viewer rather than receding. He did not
paint objects, he painted space and then furnished it.
He was so close to the earth that for twenty years he did not paint the sky. He
told the architect who designed his house in Varengeville not to use
top-quality glass because he wanted the view through the closed window to be
different from the view through the open one. He avoided all symbols. Picasso
said he was not ‘domineering enough’ to paint a portrait, a remark which says
more about Picasso. He thought that the ideal was to reach a state where we no
longer say anything when in front of a painting. He knew that a Braque fake was
a fake because it was ‘beautiful’.
He
displayed the same unswervingness, the same elimination of the unwanted, the same commitment and certainty in his private
life. When the Germans invaded France in 1940, Braque was 58. His service in
the Second War was as quietly heroic as in the First. The Germans were clever
at flattering and suborning important cultural figures; they had to be resisted
with not just a moral sense but also a tactical intelligence. One winter’s evening,
two German officers arrived at Braque’s studio. But it was so cold, they said:
how could a great painter work in such conditions? They would salute his genius
by sending him two lorry-loads of coal. Braque’s answer was superb. ‘No, thank
you,’ he said. ‘For if I accepted, I should no longer be able
to speak well of you.’
In
1941 the invaders persuaded a group of French artists to visit the Fatherland.
Some of their inducements, like the offer of fuel, were obviously tainted;
others, like the promise to release French prisoners of war, deliberately put
their invitees in a quandary. Here Othon Friesz re-enters the story. He agreed
to go, as did Derain, Vlaminck, Van Dongen and Dunoyer de Segonzac. The photo
taken of them on the platform of the Gare de l’Est – flanked by triumphant
German officers – reeks of unease and bad faith. Braque’s only public comment
on the trip was properly conscious of the dilemma: ‘Fortunately, my painting
did not please. I wasn’t invited. Otherwise, perhaps I would have gone, on account
of the promised releases.’ After the Liberation, Picasso – though not a French
citizen – took the chair of a Front National des Arts which sent the
authorities a list of collaborationists, requesting their arrest and trial. In
June 1946, 23 were sanctioned by a purifying tribunal, with Friesz, Vlaminck,
Derain and Van Dongen receiving one-year bans. Braque distanced himself from
the public taste for épuration (how, in any case, can you ‘purify’ with
a one-year ban?), but his private sanction was more damning and more final. He
broke with Friesz and Derain; and when he encountered Van Dongen in Deauville,
not a word was ever exchanged.
The
moral authority was the greater for not being publicly advertised. There was
something about Braque’s calmness, his silence, his artistic commitment which
unwittingly showed up lesser men and women. He became, over the years, a living
rebuke to vanity, pomposity, charlatanry. Gertrude Stein, who thought only
Spaniards could be Cubists (and who later offered to translate Pétain’s
speeches), wrote a ‘word-portrait’ of Braque in her finest mode of clotted
twaddle. (Perhaps it was meant to be Cubist prose. If so, a bad idea –
brushstrokes may slip representationalism, but words do so at their peril.)
Cocteau, who himself was lucky to escape épuration, and who saluted
Hitler’s favourite sculptor in Occupied Paris, patronised Braque for having
‘the perfect taste of a poor milliner’ – the remark of a gaudy snob. A similar
snobbery is implicit in Le Corbusier’s Purist manifesto, where he and his
co-propounder, Ozenfant, dismiss ‘simple paintings by good painter-decorators
smitten with form and colour’. What more desirable description of a painter,
you might think, than as one ‘smitten with form and colour’? And then there is our
own Bruce Chatwin, who as a 20-year-old courier from Sotheby’s was allowed into
Braque’s presence when a well-known collector wanted a drawing authenticated.
Each time Chatwin recycled the anecdote, his own participation swelled
gloriously.
These
are revealing side-encounters, which confirm the painter as the moral
equivalent of magnetic north (true north too, for that matter). The main
encounter was always with Picasso. The Spaniard liked to say that he took
Braque to the station at Avignon in 1914 and never saw him again. But this was
no more than an exasperated denial of an obvious truth: that ‘anticipated
memories’ was an accurate prediction, and that the two would remain in one
another’s thoughts and studios until death. At times it is an
astonishment that two great artists, so aesthetically indistinguishable
at the high moment of Cubism, could have such radically different temperaments,
beliefs, politics, personal habits and social tactics. When reading about
Picasso’s ways with his fellow mortals, you sometimes wonder if ‘fellow
mortals’ is even an appropriate term: he combined the relentlessness of a
Wunderkind with the wilfulness and vanity of a god. He was like one of those
old denizens of Olympus whose abrupt interventions in human affairs are purely
selfish and delightedly manipulative. The fact that you were a friend or a
lover merely upped the ante. As Françoise Gilot observed, ‘his lowest tricks
were reserved for those he liked best.’ Braque was one of the few – Gilot
herself being another – who managed successfully to resist Picasso. Silence and
withdrawal were Braque’s main tactics, which of course exasperated Picasso the
more. One of the great undocumented exchanges – perhaps we shall learn more
when John Richardson reaches the war years – came when Picasso spent a week in
1944 trying to persuade Braque to join the Communist Party. Braque denied him,
as he also denied a second approach from none other than Simone Signoret (I
feel a three-hander play coming on).
Braque
was like some hilltop castle that Picasso was constantly besieging. He invests
it, bombards it, mines it, assaults it – and each time the smoke clears, the
castle is as solid as ever. Thwarted, he declares the site of no strategic
interest anyway. Braque, he says, merely has ‘charm’. He tells him he has
turned out to be ‘the Vuillard of Cubism’. He tells him his paintings are ‘well
hung’. Braque replies that Picasso’s ceramics are ‘well cooked’. It is often
the laconic, rather than the voluble, who win verbal battles. Picasso’s words
frequently arise from not getting his own way over something unconnected with
art; either that, or as a means of cheerleading the
Picassoites. Braque’s words seem the more pondered, more to do with art, and
therefore more deadly. Words like ‘talent’ and ‘virtuoso’ have an extra edge in
his mouth. His replies culminate in the famous observation: ‘Picasso used to be
a great painter. Now he is merely a genius.’ That’s to say, the public’s idea
of a genius, someone protean and industrially productive, whose private life is
also a publicised circus.
They
were not the first or the last ‘pardners’ to fall out, and to give the
maliciously indifferent an afternoon of pleasure. But unlike some other
fallings-out (that of Truffaut and Godard, for instance, which was rancorous
and terminal), Picasso and Braque’s was complicated and continuing rather than
ever final. And though Picasso might seem the more powerful, and certainly was
the more famous, it was he who comes across as the supplicant, the more needy, in their dealings. It was Picasso who complained
of being neglected and insufficiently visited; Picasso who took his new
girlfriends to Braque for approval (and also, one suspects,
to boast of his pulling power). And in their working lives it was Picasso who
learned how to grind colour from Braque, and how to make his papiers collés
stick; Picasso who was led to new challenges by Braque’s work (the Studios
of 1949-56 provoking the Las Meniñas variations) rather than the other
way round; Picasso who suggested in the mid-1950s that the two of them go back
to collaborating again as they had done half a lifetime previously – another
invitation Braque declined.
René
Char called them Picasso and anti-Picasso; but as Danchev’s biography goes on,
they turn more into Braque and anti-Braque. Braque slow,
silent, autonomous, magisterial; anti-Braque mercurial, noisy, voluminous,
virtuosic. Braque pursuing his own, known, ‘limited’
path; anti-Braque furiously metamorphic. Braque rural,
domestic and uxorious; anti-Braque cosmopolitan, voracious and Dionysiac.
It is not an either/or, more an and/also: there are different ways of being a
genius, whether that word is loaded or not. Yet it is also salutary to flip the
traditional order of expression and to write, as Danchev does, that Picasso’s
‘Braque period’ was ‘the most concentrated and fruitful of his whole career’.
There
is a danger of attributing sanctity to Braque. Jean Paulhan wrote that he was
‘reflective but violent’. He was hurtful to Juan Gris, refusing to be hung in
the same room; he once beat up his ex-dealer at Hôtel Drouot on what sound like
fairly reasonable grounds. While decrying Picasso’s ‘duchess period’, his
ball-going and fancy costumes, Braque was, in his soberer way, a pretty dressy
fellow himself: on his rare trips to London, he headed not for the National
Gallery but for the house of Mr Lobb the bootmaker. He had a taste for fast and
expensive cars, both driving them and being driven; like Picasso he had a
uniformed chauffeur. He also enjoyed his food, though here a certain puritanism
kicked in: on a tour of three-star Paris restaurants with the painter Humberto
Stragiotti, he quite spoiled it for his companion by wolfing down his food far
too quickly. Before taking his first transatlantic telephone call, Braque
combed his hair. An odd reaction – was it vanity or modesty? (Perhaps not so
odd: I once watched a Sunday Times journalist leap to his feet when he
realised that the caller at the other end of the line was Lord Snowdon.)
These
are passing, and humanising, distractions. What struck many people who met
Braque was the completeness, the integration of his personality, and the
further integration of that personality with his art. Françoise Gilot said:
‘All of Braque was always there.’ Miró said he was ‘a model of everything that
is skill, serenity and reflection’. For the young John Richardson, visiting the
painter’s studio for the first time, ‘I felt I had arrived at the very heart of
painting.’ This, finally – and firstly – is where his authority comes from.
Danchev’s
biography has a rare and admirable concision; a proper awareness that Braque’s
work is the only reason for being interested in his life; and a further awareness that such a life is in any case most lived
while making the work. There is little gossip to be had around Braque’s
existence, because he provoked and provided little (he came back from the First
War with only one ‘war story’). Georges and Marcelle Braque, Danchev
authoritatively assures us, ‘were completely faithful to each other for over fifty
years’. (Duncan Grant could so little comprehend their coupledom that he
decided it must derive from a shared passion for the sea.) When Mariette
Lachaud joined the Braque household in 1930 at the age of 16 (her mother was
the cook), you might think her future course would be a cliché. But as Danchev
points out, she was ‘as chaste as she was devoted’, and graduated from ‘studio
assistant to ministering angel and photographic documentarist – never to
mistress’.
This
is, in fact, more biographically interesting than the usual tales and trails of
artistic bed-hopping. A friend of mine long held as her two chief images of
conjugality Etruscan marital tomb-statues and the Avedon portrait of the
Braques in old age – he seated, smiling, she resting against his shoulder. (A
curious coincidence that the ceiling Braque painted in the Louvre – the only
such commission he ever accepted – was for the Etruscan room.) Marcelle Braque
was even more discreet than her husband, and left few traces; she was ‘a real
woman of the people’, we are told; also cultured, religious and shrewd. She
once warned Nicolas de Staël: ‘Watch out – you staved off poverty all right,
but do you have the strength to stave off riches?’ We are told that she sewed
Modigliani’s shroud. Perhaps there is no more to discover than Danchev tells
us; but at times his biography could do with more of her reminding presence.
There is also an unexplained lacuna in his account of Braque’s relations with
his parents. One moment they are sending him off to Paris with their full
blessing (and financial support) for his artistic life. The next, with Marcelle
in the picture, we are inexplicably told of ‘another obstacle: Braque’s
parents, above all his father, unmet and perhaps unreconciled’. Similarly, the
aged Braque is suddenly described as ‘cancer-yellow’ without any indication if
this is diagnostic or merely illustrative. Perhaps the biographer has so
immersed himself in France that the discretion of its biographical tradition
has leached into him.
If
so, it is an understandable tact in his subject’s presence. ‘The only thing
that matters in art is what cannot be explained,’ Braque wrote. And: ‘How is
one to talk about colour? . . . Those who have eyes know just how
irrelevant words are to what they see.’ Further: ‘To define a thing is to
substitute the definition for the thing.’ In the same way, to write a biography
is to substitute the written life for the lived life, an awkward business at
best, but possible, as here, as long as Braquean moral truth is at hand. The
painter approached death as he had life: ‘always there’, in Gilot’s words;
towards the end, he called for his palette, and Danchev touchingly lists the
colours clinging to it. Braque died ‘without suffering, calmly, his gaze fixed
until the last moment on the trees in the garden, the highest branches of which
were visible from the great windows of his studio’.
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