| Andre Masson, French (1896-1987)
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French painter, b. 1896 in Balagny.
The work of Andri Masson has an important place in the development
of Surrealism. He began his studies before 1914, at the Academie
Royale des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, and the Ecole des Beaux-Arts
in Paris. He served in the Great War in the fighting lines,
and was severely wounded. The war experience of Masson affected
him very deeply. The abnormal realities of trench warfare, with
its domination by extreme violence, its immediate contiguity
of life and death, presented questions of the motivation of
human behaviour. His work has been an essay in confronting life
at that-level of experience. Masson went to Paris in 1922, and
associated with Miro and with the poets. Armand Salacrou, Michel
Leiris and Georges Limbour. His interest in the deeper reality
of man's behaviour drew him to Surrealism. In 1924 he met Andre
Breton, joined the Surrealist group, and exhibited with them
for some years. He became very involved with non-rational purpose
in art, in developing drawing and painting as nearly as possible
as direct thought transference. With Miro he produced 'automatic'
drawings. These allowed the free movement of the pen line, without
pre-thought or condition of any kind. To obtain the same effect
in painting, Masson used drawn confinuous lines of glue on the
canvas, adding the colour by coating with different Coloured
sands.
Very early in his career Masson relinquished any desire to
construct paintings on Cubist or any other lines. For him painting
has not been a contrived art, a matter of developing a style.
It.had to be a part of life itself, a 'way of knowing' simultaneous
with a way of action; admitting the violent, the erotic, the
chaotic, spurning any rationally formulated order. In 1940 he
exiled himself to America. Masson's Surrealist ideas found the
new soil productive, and. his influence on American painting
was strong. In particular Arshile Gorky drew on it, as did Jackson
Pollock and Mark Rothko. Pollock's Action Painting has much
in common with Masson's early sandpaintings, and with his automatism
of method. He returned to Paris in 1945. He designed the scenery
for a production of Hamlet in 1946, and for Berg's opera Wozzeck
in 1963. He had before the war been concerned in a similar way
with various productions. Masson's life work represents a series
of periods of exploration, for his personal purpose, of various
techniques, varying from full, rich polychrome to monochrome
and purely linear work. On occasions involving closely defined
biomorphic images, his work is characterized by extreme speed
of execution and complex personal imagery.
M. Leiris and G. Limbour. Andre Masson et son univers, Geneva
and Paris 1947.
Otto Hahn. Andri Masson, London and New York 1965.
Artist's Gallery
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