Georges Mathieu
Biography of French Abstract Expressionist Painter.
MAIN A-Z INDEX - A-Z of ARTISTS

Pin it


 

FINEST CONTEMPORARY ART
For the best works, see:
Greatest 20th-Century Paintings.
For more artists like
Georges Mathieu, see:
Modern Artists.

For postwar works, see:
Postmodernist Artists.

DEFINITION OF ART
For an explanation of the
terminology, see:
Art: Definition and Meaning.

WORLDS BEST PAINTERS
For top creative practitioners, see:
Best Artists of All Time.

His most famous painting is Homage to Death (1950). This is a beautiful example of Mathieu's expressive gestural painting.

Georges Mathieu (1921-2012)

Biography

The French painter Georges Mathieu was a leading exponent of Art Informel (the French version of abstract expressionism), and is best-known for his spiky calligraphic-style abstract paintings characterized by sweeping gesturalist brushwork, as in Untitled (1959, Solomon R Guggenheim Museum, New York). Associated principally with the Lyrical Abstraction style, but also Tachisme, Mathieu's expressive art, combined with a natural talent for self-promotion, gained him an international reputation during the 1950s. Curiously, Mathieu described himself not as a practitioner of non-objective art, but rather as a history painter using abstract forms. In any event, his signature style has made him one of the most recognizable 20th-century painters within the Art Informel idiom.

Born in Boulogne, in northern France, Mathieu studied law and philosophy before starting to paint in 1942. Largely self-taught as an artist, in 1947 he moved to Paris where he worked for American Express during the day, and painted during the evenings and weekends, in a rented studio near the Palais Luxembourg. Also in 1947 he helped launch the lyrical abstraction mode of painting by organizing the Paris exhibition entitled "Abstraction Lyrique". The organic shapes of the exhibited works contrasted with the geometric style of concrete art found in traditional abstract painting.

Mathieu's own early work featured a number of large canvases with coloured scrolls, whorls and other motifs painted on a black background. Subsequently, he changed his background to white, upon which he painted simple geometrical forms. In the 1950s he showed fifty of these paintings at the Leicester Galeries in London. Mathieu's gestural style was influenced by several people, including the Tachiste Hans Hartung (1904-89), the American Jackson Pollock (1912-56), inventor of action painting, and the members of the Gutai Art Association, (1954–72) in Japan. (NOTE: For a different style of gesturalism, see: Jackson Pollock's paintings 1940-56.)

A natural self-publicist, Mathieu painted many of his pictures during public performances, typically applying the paint directly from the tube onto the canvas. At the height of his career, Mathieu was one of France's most successful painters, and in 1974 was the subject of a documentary film, Georges Mathieu, or the Fury of Being. His work was included in the Guggenheim's 2012 exhibition "Art of Another Kind: International Abstraction and the Guggenheim, 1949-1960."

 

Other Abstract Expressionists

Other notable exponents of Art Informel in its main forms include: Serge Poliakoff (1906-69), Maria Helena Vieira da Silva (1908-92), Alfred Manessier (1911-93), Wols (Alfred Otto Wolfgang Sculze) (1913-51), Nicolas de Stael (1914-55), Asger Jorn (1914-73), Pierre Soulages (b.1919), Karel Appel (1921-2006), and Jean-Paul Riopelle (1923-2002). Other painters who made contributions to the movement include the American painters Mark Tobey (1890-1976) and Sam Francis (1923-94), as well as the St Ives colourist Patrick Heron (1920-99).

Paintings by Georges Mathieu can be seen in some of the best art museums around the world.

 

• For more about abstraction, see: Abstract Expressionist Painting.
• For the latest styles, see: Postmodernist Art.
• For more details of 20th-century painting, see: Homepage.


ENCYCLOPEDIA OF VISUAL ARTISTS
© visual-arts-cork.com. All rights reserved.