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Wandering Jew
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By
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Christopher Benfey
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(posted Tuesday, May 5,
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1998)
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You're
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greeted at the door by the page boy from Maxim's, his hand extended for a
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pourboire ( Page Boy at Maxim's , circa 1925). At first the figure
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looks almost cute in his fire engine red suit, but is that a roll of bills in
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his left hand or is he making an obscene gesture? And those hollow black eyes,
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scarred hands, and sunken chest--don't they seem just a bit sepulchral? Is he
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welcoming us to Maxim's or to the underworld?
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For the moment, at
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least, he's guarding the entrance to the stunning show at the Jewish Museum
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devoted to the work of Chaim Soutine (1894-1943), the Lithuanian-born Jewish
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painter who worked in Paris between the world wars. This is the first major
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exhibition in a New York museum to be devoted to Soutine's work in nearly 50
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years--since, that is, the epoch-making retrospective of 1950 at the Museum of
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Modern Art. The timing of that show, mounted just seven years after Soutine's
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death, was in one sense perfect and in another highly problematic. It coincided
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exactly with the extraordinary rise of Abstract Expressionism and the seismic
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shift of the center of the art world from Paris to New York. Artists and
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critics were eager to see in Soutine a Parisian precursor of Willem de
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Kooning--who claimed to be "crazy about Soutine"--and Jackson Pollock. The
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extraordinary landscapes that Soutine painted around 1921 in the provincial
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town of Céret, with their swirling wreaths of thick paint and decentered
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structure, could easily be mistaken for early de Koonings. (Click here for an example.) "Was Soutine at this time what might
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be called an abstract expressionist?" the critic and curator Monroe Wheeler
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asked rhetorically in the MoMA catalog.
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But in other ways, the timing of the MoMA show was awkward
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and even potentially embarrassing. As France was welcomed back to the postwar
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community of nations, no one felt like asking tough questions about French
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acquiescence in the Holocaust. In the 1950 catalog, Wheeler implied that
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Soutine's death in 1943 had little to do with the Occupation. "Soutine," he
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wrote, "suffered no specific persecution or violence during the war. In 1940,
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he was offered an opportunity to come to America, but he would not take
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advantage of it. He lived with a friend ... in Touraine." And so on. But, as
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the art historian Remy Golan notes in a catalog essay for the current show,
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"after having provided hospitality to Soutine and thousands of Jewish
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immigrants like him for three decades, the French essentially abandoned them to
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their own fate during the years of German occupation." Soutine wasn't just
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"living with a friend" in the countryside. He was in flight from the Nazis and
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their French functionaries, hiding and constantly on the move. He returned to
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Paris only when a severe stomach ulcer condition necessitated a last-minute
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operation. It came too late, and he died.
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So the current show at
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the Jewish Museum offers an opportunity both to re-evaluate Soutine's
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connection to de Kooning and Pollock and to dig more deeply into Soutine's
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relation to French culture and to his own Jewishness. The show is arranged in a
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manner to do just that, though with a resulting wrenching of chronology and
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little attention to Soutine's life. The 56 paintings in the show are hung in
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three sections, each corresponding to one of the three ways critics have viewed
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Soutine: Soutine as an untutored "primitive" painter, which is how he was seen
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in the 1920s; Soutine as a master and the last great hope for traditional
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painting in France--his reputation in the 1930s; and Soutine as a prophet of
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Abstract Expressionism, which is what critics thought in the 1940s, when they
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"rediscovered" him. It is this third phase that leads to the biggest
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dislocation in the show, since visitors see the "abstract" paintings of the
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Céret period last, though they were among the earliest Soutine painted. The
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first two phases--from primitive to master--happen to follow pretty much
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directly from the circumstances of Soutine's life, to the extent that we know
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them.
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The youthful Soutine seems to step right out of an Isaac
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Bashevis Singer story. Since he left almost no paper trail--few letters, no
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drawings, no artistic manifestoes--the same stories gleaned from friends and
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dealers have been recycled over the years. Soutine was born the 10 th
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of 11 children to an impoverished tailor (or more precisely a "mender") and his
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wife in Smilovitchi, a village near Minsk. Legends about his childhood--of
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which he may have been the source--include his theft of some kitchen utensils
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to buy his first colored pencil, and his early portrait of a local rabbi. The
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rabbi's son, evidently responding to the Jewish injunction against graven
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images, beat up Soutine, then paid a reparation of 25 rubles toward Soutine's
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education. Soutine trained first with artists in Minsk and Vilna, then made the
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journey to Paris, where he studied briefly in a formal art academy while living
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in the most abject poverty.
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Some of his earliest
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still lifes, dating from 1916 to 1918, look like little parables of
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deprivation: three anorexic herrings on a plate with two forks (why two?)
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groping across them ( Still Life With Herrings , circa 1916). The table is
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tipped upward, almost meeting the picture plane. Such paintings, along with the
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swirling Céret landscapes, struck collectors of the 1920s as "naive," just the
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sort of unschooled stuff you'd expect from a Slavic child of the shtetl .
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The critic Waldemar George wrote in 1928, "Is this not the art of an exile, or
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even a savage?" Soutine's big break came in 1922, when one of those
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connoisseurs of the "primitive," the eccentric Philadelphia art educator Dr.
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Albert Barnes, bought up 52 of Soutine's paintings, making Soutine an art world
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celebrity almost overnight.
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But almost as soon as he had experienced this
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Cinderella-like reversal of fortune, Soutine developed second thoughts about
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his work up to that point and tried to destroy as much of it as he could get
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his hands on. No longer the wild and visionary improviser, Soutine now
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apprenticed himself to the great painterly painters of the past: Courbet,
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Chardin, and Rembrandt. If you preferred his early landscapes, it was easy to
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regard this new Soutine as--in the words of Clement Greenberg, who reviewed the
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MoMA show--"a victim of the museum." But if you liked the later paintings, as
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French critics of the '30s tended to do, they seemed like the next step in the
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great French tradition. Soutine the Slavic-Jewish outsider quickly became
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Soutine the quintessential insider, a masterly upholder of the standards of
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sophisticated French art.
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Never
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able to paint anything unless he had it before his eyes, Soutine set about
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re-enacting some of the classic paintings he loved most. He persuaded peasant
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women to hike up their skirts and stand in cold streams, just as Rembrandt had
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demanded. He acquired a skate from the fishmonger and painted a loose
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paraphrase of a Chardin still life. In imitation of Rembrandt's flayed ox on
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display at the Louvre, Soutine hung a carcass of beef in his studio. In a
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carnivalesque reassigning of roles, he hired a model to sweep away the flies
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from the decaying meat. To keep the colors fresh, he dabbed the carcass with
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blood from a pail, then grabbed his paintbrushes to capture those lurid reds on
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canvas. This was the kind of scene that an action painter could relish. De
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Kooning could have been thinking of his idol Soutine when he observed, "Flesh
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was the reason why oil painting was invented."
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You'd think Soutine, with his obsessive delight in flesh,
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would paint nudes, but no; he painted only one in his whole career, and it's a
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minor painting. But at the same time he was painting his carcasses of cattle
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and fowl, around 1925, Soutine painted a series of portraits of uniformed
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workers--bellhops, pastry cooks, grooms--of which the Maxim's page boy is
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probably the best known. This parallel obsession elicited the interesting
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suggestion, from the critic Maurice Tuchman, that both animals (especially
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sacrificed animals) and uniformed domestics were scapegoats of sorts. While
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Soutine--unlike Chagall, to whom he is sometimes compared--did not paint
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stereotypically Jewish subjects, he may have been alluding, with those dangling fowl, to a Yom Kippur rite in which a slaughtered
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chicken was whirled around a rabbi's head in a ritual of absolution. It may
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also be worth noting that with their red or white uniforms, these servants
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allowed Soutine to retain his lurid, fleshy palate.
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It has
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been tempting to see in Soutine's flayed forms a premonition of things to come.
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The curators of the Jewish Museum show, in a volley of questions, invite such a
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response:
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Mightn't the eviscerated
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cows and the fowl in the throes of death be experienced as modernist mementi
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mori, fetishistic reminders of the darkest, cruelest, and most primitive human
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instincts? Couldn't Soutine's eruptive, vertiginous landscapes be construed as
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recollections of a ravaged Europe, or even as the foreshadowing of an
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apocalyptic, post-atomic future?
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And so
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on.
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The irony is that Soutine seems to have viewed the arrival
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of the Nazis, at least initially, with a certain equanimity, more cheerful than
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fatalistic. Perhaps he had so thoroughly identified his art at this point with
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French national traditions--was he not the legitimate heir of Courbet?--that he
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hardly imagined himself to be a potential victim. One of his mistresses
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recalled him reading with admiration editorials by the collaborationist
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idealogue Charles Maurras, of Action Française , and explaining that he
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approved of social inequality "because it presented magnificent opportunities
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for everyone." One day she said to him, "You have had great unhappiness in your
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life, haven't you, Soutine?" He replied, "No! What makes you think that? I have
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always been a happy man."
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Nonetheless, the image from
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his late work that stays with you is a little picture from the Phillips
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Collection called Return From School After the Storm (circa 1939). Here
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the paint is as swirling and thick as in Soutine's earliest landscapes. The two
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children hold hands fearfully as storm clouds hover ominously above them. The
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two vulnerable figures are literally molded of paint; the girl's left hand juts
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out a quarter-inch from the canvas in one thick dab. The title is not
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Soutine's. I don't think it's a school that these children are running from,
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and I don't think the storm is behind them.
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