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The Unknown Matisse
The Unknown Matisse
Oct 6, 2024 4:34 PM

Author:Hilary Spurling

The Unknown Matisse

Astonishing and essential, the biography that reclaimed Henri Matisse from history's slanders and restored his place in the canon of the 20th century's greatest artists

Before acclaimed biographer Hilary Spurling turned her attention to Henri Mattise, precious few facts were known about his life - and those few were distorted by inaccuracy, misunderstanding and glaring gaps. The Unknown Matisse investigates the secret life of The Wild Beast (as he was known), whose early paintings shocked and enraged his contemporaries. It tells the story of an innovative genius, born in war-torn, poverty-stricken Flanders who finally overcame hardship and disaster to fulfil Van Gogh's prophecy: 'The painter of the future will be such a colourist as has never yet been.'

Reviews

I was deeply moved... De Waal has found a way to meditate on exile, migration and polarisation that feels painfully relevant

—— Sunday Times

This is a marvellous book, elegant, tender, loving, appreciative, disturbing, a reminder of both the fragility and resilience of high culture, indeed civilisation

—— Scotsman

De Waal is a writer of grace and restlessly enquiring intelligence, and Letters to Camondo succeeds admirably... Edmund de Waal's beautiful book opens a window onto an entire lost world

—— Evening Standard

De Waal's sentences like to take the historical weight of the objects he describes... An unforgettable book

—— Observer

It will make you think differently about trunks in the attic and it will make you read old letters with new eyes

—— The Times

Consistently illuminating... excellently illustrated... De Waal's excavation of the meanings of assimilation is considered, compassionate and appreciative of its costs... he is a wise guide to people and things that are dispersed and are collected... This book is a wonderful tribute to a family and to an idea

—— Nicholas Wroe , Guardian

More than chronicling the [Camondo] family's splendor and tragic end, de Waal has created a deeply hued tapestry of a lost time and a poetic meditation on grief, memory, and the fragile consolation of art... A radiant family history.

—— Kirkus

Letters to Camondo immerses you in another age - one as sharply torn with rifts and bigotry, political uncertainty and changing fortunes as our own - but also a time of grace and the deliberate cultivation of pleasure... de Waal creates a dazzling picture of what it means to live graciously

—— Nilanjana Roy , Financial Times

Letters to Camondo... is subtle and thoughtful and nuanced and quiet. It is demanding but rewarding. It will make you think differently about trunks in the attic and it will make you read old letters with new eyes

—— Laura Freeman , The Times

I was deeply moved... [de Waal] has found a way to meditate on exile, migration and polarisation that feels painfully relevant

—— Johanna Thomas-Corr , Sunday Times

This is a marvellous book, elegant, tender, loving, appreciative, disturbing, a reminder of both the fragility and resilience of high culture, indeed civilisation

—— Allan Massie , Scotsman

A slim elegant volume of beautifully written letters

—— Louise Carpenter , The Times

Letters to Camondo tells de Waal's version of the Camondo story... layers of memories, hopes, fears embedded in the Musée Camondo brought alive...remarkable

—— Jackie Wullschläger , Financial Times

Moving... beautifully produced... I visited the Musee Nissim de Camondo some dozen years ago. Now I long to go back

—— Gillian Tindall , Literary Review

De Waal's ability to conjure up the personality of a character long dead through his possessions is a joy... A moving picture of the Jewish condition in Europe, always ready for flight once the scapegoating begins again, is made starkly apparent... In de Waal's hands objects stand for much bigger truths, of questions of loss and injustice

—— Oliver Basciano , ArtReview

Enchanting... the prose is immaculately polished. [Edmund de Waal's] intelligence and scholarship are fastidious, his sensibility quivers like the wings of a hummingbird

—— Rupert Christiansen , The Telegraph

De Waal's elegant prose, rapt eye for aesthetics, subtle character sketches, and nuanced musings on Jewish identity yield a rich, Proustian recreation of a lost era

—— Publishers Weekly

de Waal's history, gives Letters to Camondo an undeniable emotional intensity

—— Brendan King , Times Literary Supplement

de Waal is a writer of grace and restlessly enquiring intelligence, and Letters to Camondo succeeds admirably... Edmund de Waal's beautiful book opens a window onto an entire lost world

—— Ian Thomson , Evening Standard

A rich and gorgeous meditation on art and grief... Beautifully written, elegantly odd and wonderfully immersive, this is a book like no other

—— Daunt Books

De Waal's sentences like to take the historical weight of the objects he describes, in prose that often puts you in mind of Bruce Chatwin, that other aesthete magically in thrall to painfully buried European history. He builds a picture of Camondo accumulating belongings in an extravagant effort at belonging... [an] unforgettable book

—— Tim Adams , Observer

De Waal's gentle and thoughtful probing is persuasive and his exploration of the family history after the count's death in 1935 - especially the deaths of family members under the Nazis - is both poignant and unforced

—— Michael Prodger , New Statesman

The form of a series of letters to Camondo... [is] an inspired idea, for it allows de Waal to achieve an intimacy of tone and directness of expression... a powerful address that is both a rupture with and a binding to all that precedes it

—— Laurel Berger , Spectator

A fascinating portrait of the French collector Count Moise de Camondo

—— A Little Bird, *Summer Reads of 2021*

Outsider art requires outsider biography, and Blackburn, an expert in finding new forms to fit odd lives, has managed her task magnificently.

—— Kathryn Hughes , Guardian

Beautifully delicate.

—— Big Issue

Richly satisfying.

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Sunday Express

A gorgeous, dreamy quest, for a man named John Craske.

—— Rose George , New Statesman

The book has an understated charm and is a beautifully rendered portrait of an artist’s life and landscape.

—— Ian Critchley , Sunday Times

This tender biography is gossipy and philosophical by turns.

—— Daily Telegraph

Executed with undeniable skill and the sense of an intimate acquaintance with life on the open seas.

—— Herald Scotland

Unusually moving.

—— William Leith , Evening Standard
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