On this September 23, 1964, the Paris Opera unveils its new ceiling which was painted as a gift by Belorussian-born artist Marc Chagall. It was typical of his masterpieces with its childlike simplicity, luminous with colors and of a dream world.
Who was Marc Chagall?
- Born in the town of Vitebsk in the Russian empire in 1887.
- His parents were Jewish merchants.
- The Jewish and Russian folkloric themes to which he was exposed in his youth influenced his artwork
- He took up drawing as a child and in 1906 went to St. Petersburg to study art with the help of a rich Jewish patron.
- In 1908, he was invited to the Zvantseva School to study under the prestigious theater designer Leon Bakst
- In 1908 he produced one of his great works, The Dead Man, a nightmarish painting inspired by a brush with death.
- In 1910, another Jewish patron sent Chagall to Paris, rescuing him from what might have been a career confined to folk art.
- In Paris he was embraced by avant-garde artists who encouraged him to exploit the seemingly irrational tendencies of his art.
- His I and the Village (1911) generated widespread enthusiasm.
- Chagall entered the artistic phase that many viewed as his best. His pictures, wrought in a variety of artistic mediums, showed a fantastical world in which people, animals, and other figurative elements were cast in bright and unusual colors and seemed to dance and float across the canvas.
- He had his first one-man show in Berlin in 1914,
- With the outbreak of World War I, Chagall was stranded in Russia during a visit to Vitebsk.
- He welcomed the Russian Revolution of 1917, which provided full citizenship for Russian Jews and brought official recognition of Chagall and his art.
- He was made a commissar for art in the Vitebsk region and helped establish a local museum and art academy.
- He was soon frustrated by aesthetic and political quarrels and in 1922 left Soviet Russia for the West.
- He was welcomed as an idol by the Surrealists, who saw in Chagall paintings like Paris Through the Window (1913) an important precursor to their own irrational and dream-like art.
- He took up engraving and produced hundreds of illustrations for special editions of Nikolai Gogol’s Dead Souls, Jean de La Fontaine’s Fables, and the Bible.
- In 1941, he fled with his wife from Nazi-occupied Paris to the United States, where he lived in and around New York City for seven years.
- War-induced pessimism and sadness over the death of his wife infused much of his art from this period, as seen in the Yellow Crucifixion (1943) and Around Her (1945).
- In 1945, he designed the sets and costumes for the New York production of Igor Stravinsky’s The Firebird.
- In 1946 Chagall was given a retrospective exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art.
- In 1948, he returned to France, and eventually settled in the French Riviera village of St. Paul de Vence, his home for the rest of his life.
- In 1958, he designed the sets and costumes for a production of Maurice Ravel’s ballet Daphnis et Chloe at the Paris Opera.
- In the late 1950s and early 1960s, he produced stained-glass windows, first for a cathedral in Metz, France, and then for a synagogue in Jerusalem.
- In 1964, Chagall completed a stained-glass window for the United Nations building in New York that was dedicated to the late Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold.
- Andre Malraux, the French minister of culture, commissioned him to design a new ceiling for the Paris Opera after seeing Chagall’s work in Daphnis et Chloe.
- Working with a surface of 560 square meters, Chagall divided the ceiling into color zones that he filled with landscapes and figures representing the luminaries of opera and ballet.
- The ceiling was unveiled on September 23, 1964, during a performance of the same Daphnis et Chloe.
- As usual, a few detractors condemned Chagall’s work as overly primitive, but this criticism was drowned out in the general acclaim for the work.
- In 1966, as a gift to the city that had sheltered him during World War II, he painted two vast murals for New York’s Metropolitan Opera House (1966).
- In 1977, France honored Chagall with a retrospective exhibition at the Louvre in Paris. He continued to work vigorously until his death in 1985 at the age of 97.
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