

Intro
| Room Guide
| Matisse Picasso website (no longer online)
Matisse Picasso at Tate Modern brings together major masterpieces by the
two giants of modern art.
Between them Matisse and Picasso originated many of the most significant developments of twentieth-century
painting and sculpture.
Now you can discover more about their fascinating and intricate relationship in this long-awaited exhibition
which opens at Tate Modern and subsequently travels to Paris and New York.
Through a series of over thirty groupings of paintings and sculpture, this major exhibition gives you the
opportunity to compare and contrast Matisse's expressive use of colour and line alongside Picasso's stylistic
virtuosity. |
You can trace the artists' relationship from its beginnings in Paris in 1906, when they first met regularly
in the studio of the collectors Gertrude and Leo Stein, to the period after Matisse's death in 1954, when Picasso
paid tribute to him in his work, both directly and indirectly.
In spite of their initial rivalry, the exhibition will reveal how each artist came to acknowledge the other as his
only true equal.
The exhibition is a collaboration between Tate, the Réunion des musées
nationaux/Musée Picasso with the Musée national d'art moderne/Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, and the
Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Sponsored by
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