Œuvres
Biographie
1919-
Pierre Soulages was born in 1919, in the small city of Rodez in South West France.
Aged nineteen, he left for Paris in 1938 to take the courses of the painter and lithographer René Jaudon. The following year, he entered the ‘École des Beaux Arts’ whose program he found too academic; Soulages preferred to discover the masterpieces on view at the Louvre museum and the avant-garde art shows at the Paul Rosenberg gallery.
After the Second World War, Soulages settled on the outskirts of Paris, where he concentrated on abstract forms rendered in dark colours on canvas or on paper, drawn with charcoal or walnut ink. He first exhibited in Paris at the 1947 edition of the ‘Salon des Surindépendants’ and at the 1948 edition of the ‘Salon des Réalités Nouvelles’ before going international in Munich in 1949, and in New-York at the Betty Parsons Gallery who showed him alongside Hans Hartung. Soulages’ first one-man show was held in 1949 in Paris at the Lydia Conti gallery. Soon, Soulages gained critical and public acclaim as a major representative of Modern Art and a leader of European Post-War Abstraction.
Soulages’ Abstraction questions the relation between matter, colour and form as it appears in the act of painting. During the early 1950s, Soulages exhibited in New York, at the Guggenheim and at the Museum of Modern Art; in London at the Tate; in Paris at the ‘Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris’. He had a first one-man show in New York in 1954.
Soulages met and befriended Mark Rothko during his first transatlantic trip to the United States in 1957.
The extensive oeuvre of Soulages can be divided into several periods.
During 1946–1979, Soulages produced cyclic series of work which adhered to his trade-mark form of exploration, pushing the technical boundaries to the limit. These series started with the so-called ‘Signs’, dark shapes against light backgrounds dating 1946–1949. During 1949–1956, these ‘sign-forms’ appeared arranged in vertical or horizontal rhythms against coloured non-uniform backgrounds. During 1956–1963, Soulages covered his canvasses with colour before applying a thick layer of black which he then scraped off in places in order to reveal the colour underneath. During 1963–1971, Soulages dropped colour in favour of black and white applied on a large scale. During 1972–1978, Soulages returned to working on paper using the techniques of etching, lithography and serigraphy. In 1979, Soulages discovered the particular relationship which the colour black entertains with light. Subsequently, Soulages focussed on his research into the colour black which he famously labelled ‘outrenoir’ and ‘noir-lumière’.
As of 1979, his paintings became the portrayal of the reflection of the light against the different applications of the colour black. During the 1980s Soulages produced many polyptychs which displayed an interesting variety of surface work in the colour black, the chosen formats and formal structures.
In 1990, Soulages defined his ‘outrenoir’ as ‘being beyond black, a reflected light, transmuted by black. Outrenoir as black which ceases to be and becomes the source of clarity, of secret light. Outrenoir: another mental dimension than simply black.’
In 2009, the Centre Pompidou hosted at the occasion of the artist’s ninetieth birthday the largest retrospective ever dedicated to a living artist. In 2014, the Pierre Soulages Museum was inaugurated in his birth city of Rodez.
Soulages is a French living legend.