Chaim Soutine and Max Ernst: the dialectic of expressionism and surrealism
Introduction: parallel worlds in Paris
Chaim Soutine (1893–1943) and Max Ernst (1891–1976) were two giants of European art in the 20th century, whose creative trajectories intersected in Paris but originated from diametrically opposite artistic and philosophical systems. Soutine was a genius of the Paris School of Expressionism, immersed in the tragic materialism of flesh and nature. Ernst was one of the founders of Dadaism and surrealism, a researcher of the unconscious, myth, and automatic techniques. Their acquaintance and brief period of interaction in the 1920s represent a unique case of dialogue between the "truth of nature" and the "truth of dreams".
Context of meeting: "The Hive" and artistic brotherhood
Soutine and Ernst met in Paris in the early 1920s. Soutine, who had been living in poverty for several years, resided in the famous artists' dormitory "The Hive" (La Ruche), where his neighbors were Chagall, Modigliani, Léger. Ernst, demobilized after the war, arrived in Paris in 1922 and quickly joined the circle of Dadaists and future surrealists around André Breton. Their proximity was likely mediated by the common environment of Montparnasse and the figure of critic and collector Paul Westheim. Despite the difference in approaches, they were united by their common status as immigrants (Soutine from the Russian Empire, Ernst from Germany) and the status of radical innovators who did not fit into the academic mainstream.
Artistic antipodes: flesh vs. fantasy
Soutine's creative method:
Cult of nature: Soutine worked exclusively with nature. His famous tusche animals were bought at abattoirs and decayed in his studio until he found the desired "color of death." His portraits and landscapes were the result of a tense, almost ecstatic dialogue with the real object.
Expression through matter: His goal is to reveal the inner, hidden essence of the subject through radical distortion of for ...
Read more