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born July 12, 1884, Livorno, Italy
died Jan. 24, 1920, Paris
Italian painter and sculptor whose portraits and nudes, characterized by asymmetry of composition, elongation of the figure, and a simple but monumental use of line, are among the most important of the 20th century. They have also earned popularity for the entirely personal atmosphere with which they are invested: a kind of mute sympathy between the artist and sitter that implicates the spectator.
Modigliani was born into a Jewish family of small merchants. After suffering from pleurisy and typhus in 1895 and 1898, he was forced to give up a conventional education, and it was then that he began to study painting. After a brief stay in Florence in 1902, he continued his artistic studies in Venice, remaining there until the winter of 1906, when he left for Paris. His early admiration for Italian Renaissance painting—especially that of Siena—was to last throughout his life.
In Paris Modigliani was overwhelmed by the painting of Paul Cézanne, which exerted a decisive influence on the earliest phase of his work. His initial important contacts were with the poets André Salmon and Max Jacob, with Pablo Picasso, and with—in 1907—Paul Alexandre, a friend of the avant-garde artists and the first to become interested in Modigliani and to buy his works. In 1908 he exhibited five or six paintings at the Salon des Indépendants. He also met the Romanian sculptor Constantin Brancusi, by whose work he was impressed and on whose advice he made a serious study of African sculpture. To prepare himself for sculpture, he intensified his graphic experiments. He detested what he considered the false Impressionism of Auguste Rodin, with its pictorial modeling and susceptibility to the play of light. In his drawings he tried to give to his contours the function of limiting or enclosing the volume. In 1912 he exhibited eight stone heads at the Salon d'Automne whose elongated and simplified forms reflect the influence of African sculpture.
Modigliani soon returned entirely to painting, but his experience as a sculptor had fundamental consequences for his style. The characteristics of Modigliani's sculptured heads—long necks and noses, simplified features and long oval faces—soon invaded his painting. By reducing and almost eliminating chiaroscuro—that is, the use of gradations of light and shadow to achieve the illusion of three-dimensionality—he achieved, by the strength of his contours and the richness of juxtaposed colours, a solidity in the flat image that is similar to that of sculpture.
The outbreak of war in 1914 increased the difficulties of Modigliani's life. Alexandre and other friends were at the front; his pictures did not sell; his already delicate health was deteriorating because of his poverty, feverish work, and the abuse of alcohol and drugs. He was in the midst of a troubled affair with the English poet Beatrice Hastings, with whom he lived for two years, from 1914 to 1916. He was assisted, however, by the art dealer Paul Guillaume and especially by the Polish poet Leopold Zborowski, who bought or helped him to place a few paintings and drawings.
Modigliani was not a professional portraitist; for him the portrait was only an occasion to isolate a figure as a kind of sculptural relief through firm and expressive contour drawing. He painted his friends, personalities of the Parisian artistic and literary world, but also unimportant people: models, servants, girls from the neighbourhood. In 1917 he began painting a series of large femalenudes that, with their warm, glowing colours and sensuous, rounded forms, are among his best works. In December, Berthe Weill organized a one-man show for him in her gallery, but the police judged the nudes indecent and had them removed.
His last love affair began in the same year, 1917, with the young painter Jeanne Hébuterne, with whom he went to live on the Côte d'Azur. Their daughter Jeanne was born in November 1918. This was also a happy period for his painting, which became increasingly refined in line and delicate in colour. A more tranquil life and the climate of the Mediterranean, however, did not restore the artist's undermined health. After returning to Paris in May 1919, he became ill in January 1920 and 10 days later died of tubercular meningitis. Next day, Jeanne Hébuterne killed herself and an unborn child by jumping from a window.
Little known outside avant-garde Parisian circles, Modigliani seldom participated in official exhibitions, and his single one-man show was the one held in 1917 at Berthe Weill's. Fame came after his death with the 1922 exhibition at the Galerie Bernheim-Jeune and, later, with a monograph by the poet André Salmon.
His original sculptures, mostly in sandstone, are 25 in number; the number of drawings cannot be determined. Except for some 30 large female nudes (1916–19) and 4 landscapes (1919), his paintings are almost always portraits of relatives, artists, writers, musicians, actors, dealers, and collectors, along with many of unidentified persons. The names of the individuals portrayed may give an idea of the Montparnasse milieu frequented by the artist: Constantin Brancusi, Diego Rivera, Henri Laurens, Pablo Picasso, Chaim Soutine, Juan Gris, Max Jacob, Jean Cocteau, Jacques Lipchitz. Some—such as Paul Guillaume, Hanka and Leopold Zborowski, Beatrice Hastings, and Jeanne Hébuterne—were painted several times. Of Modigliani himself, there is only a single self-portrait, painted in 1919, shortly before his death.
Modigliani died penniless and destitute—managing only one solo exhibition in his life and giving his work away in exchange for meals in restaurants. Since his death his reputation has soared. Nine novels, a play, a documentary and two feature films have been devoted to his life.
Two films have been made about Modigliani: Les Amants de Montparnasse in 1958, directed by Jacques Becker, and Modigliani in 2004, directed by Mick Davis starring Andy Garcia as Modigliani.
Plot summary for the film MODIGLIANI (2004)
Set in Paris in 1919, biopic centers on the life of late Italian artist Amedeo Modigliani, focusing on his last days as well as his rivalry with Pablo Picasso. Modigliani, a Jew, has fallen in love with Jeanne, a young and beautiful Catholic girl. The couple has an illegitimate child, and Jeanne's bigoted parents send the baby to a faraway convent to be raised by nuns. Modigliani is distraught and needs money to rescue and raise his child. The answer arrives in the shape of Paris' annual art competition. Prize money and a guaranteed career await the winner. Neither Modigliani, nor his dearest friend and rival Picasso have ever entered the competition, believing that it is beneath true artists like themselves. But push comes to shove with the welfare of his child on the line, and Modigliani signs up for the competition in a drunken and drug-induced tirade. Picasso follows suit and all of Paris is aflutter with excitement at who will win. With the balance of his relationship with Jeanne on the line, Modigliani tackles this work with the hopes of creating a masterpiece, and knows that all the artists of Paris are doing the same.
An eventual classic, 21 May 2006
Author: BigTam from United States
I saw this movie last year and watched it again the other evening. I have studied art for many years and I applaud the detail and attention paid to each moment that reflected that period. Modigliani was, by all accounts, exactly as in the movie, charismatic, a drunk, a genius, a haunted individual. Picasso was, as in the movie, a genius, a misogynist, a jealous man and very charismatic. The performances of both Garcia and Zylberstein were truthful and painfully real. I have read the critics on this movie. I'm amazed at their lack of knowledge, one can only presume, they never bothered to research and just piggy-backed the last bad critic. One critic blasted the movie saying Picasso didn't know Modigliani, yet there are photographs taken by Jean Cocteau of them together, laughing with each other -- and Picasso helped carry the coffin of Modigliani! However, I believe the movie itself will not go away as some of these art snobs would wish, but in fact, I believe it will grow through time to become a classic. My advice to those in doubt, colored by what they read, study the individuals and the period and you will be amazed to discover that, for the most part, all that you see was sadly true. Kudos to all involved and my students of art agree.
Boring! 25 January 2006
Author: mitchmuse from Los Angeles, CA
How many variations on the same scene can be done? This movie attempts to set a record. Set the movie to play, then leave the room & go to bed, knowing that while you sleep, its dullness will dissipate into the empty room. Awake refreshed, & relieved that you did not waste your time on Modigliani.
P.s. If this movie were the honest truth about Modigliani's life, then it would be an absolute miracle that he painted as much as he did. He appears more indisposed than available to do anything other than stumble around drunk. The only 'feel-good' thing about this movie is 'THE END'.
Awesome, 4 November 2005
Author: countryclubchef from United States
There aren't many movies that have moved me the way this one does.The story of Modigliani is tragic but I think that if you only walk away with that you've missed the point. Modigliani loved. He loved wine, he loved Jeanne and obviously he loved art. What a free spirit! Modi died at age 35, not of a beating as the movie suggests, but due to his excesses and tuberculosis. I argue that he would have said the same thing many of us would say now {including me}"but what is life without them??" {the excesses}, for some people life without the highs just isn't worth it, even at the expense of suffering the lows. In addition the movie inspired me professionally.
Modigliani, 20 November 2005
Author: rosypetals from United States
A must-see for all romantics & artists. This one really touches your heart and soul. A very passionate movie about love, art and life. Wonderful, bittersweet love story. Love the music, costumes were great, attention to detail. Actors were excellent and Andy Garcia was terrific. I love this movie so much that I will buy it. It makes you feel as if you were there. Actors very convincing, they portrayed their characters in such a manner that was very moving. Also hope that there will be a soundtrack. Great filming locations, I felt like I was in Paris back in 1920 era. This one really stays with you.
An indubitable masterpiece!, 25 January 2006
Author: from United States
A masterpiece! A brilliant film acted with conviction and directed by Mick Davis with great skill, insight, and beauty. When I read the rambling of "professional" reviewers on their shallow conception of the artist as a basis for demeaning this film, I felt ashamed of being human. The truth is that I have never experienced a more psychologically insightful and compelling cinematic portrayal of the artistic spirit. The montage depicting artistic creation is one of the greatest in the history of world cinema. Guy Farley's music score is absolutely perfect. Complex, haunting, and enthralling! To director Mick Davis: Thank you for this magnificent film. You have truly created a masterpiece! Do not be discouraged by the negative reviews. "Professional" critics have seldom properly appreciated true genius.
Beautiful and heady, 27 October 2006
Author: clockley-1 from Australia
This is not a documentary. If you (unlike myself) are a versed art historian, you may well have issues with some of Davis's choices regarding his portrayal of famous art personalities. If, however, you simply enjoy a subtly crafted film, then this film is for you. It doesn't set out to 'explain' artistic motivations (a wise choice from Mike Davis, - for who can ever really claim to know 'why' an artist does what he/she does) but rather presents an ethereal collage of colour, sound and minimal script and allows the audience to draw its own conclusions about the life and motivations of Modigliani and those surrounding him. Garcia does a credible job of bringing Modigliani's addict soul to the screen and, for all his faults, is an eminently watchable actor throughout the 2hrs of screen time. Elsa Sylberstein is hauntingly beautiful, and the film's soundtrack is perfect.
Very well done, 9 September 2007
Author: pyramidalapex from United States
Superbly acted and photographed recreation of the times, both visually and culturally.
Left me wondering where the art used in the film came from. The actress who played Modigliani's girlfriend was portrayed so well in the art that it makes me think someone created the art just for the film. But when paintings are created for films you can always tell! And here it's art of famous painters whose work and style is very well known. The paintings used in this film appeared absolutely genuine!
Ever wondered where artist's inspiration comes from? This film reveals where these important painters thought theirs was coming from--an on-the-edge lifestyle that didn't last long for reasons made clear in the film. For the record, I disagree with Messrs. Modigliani and Picasso...
Fascinating! Great job Andy! Great film!
A Superb Film!, 24 September 2007
Author: Pablo999 from United States
Ignore any negative criticism you may have read about this film and just see it. Andy Garcia gives his best performance ever in this piece. The entire cast is excellent, the costumes are amazing, and the sets are fantastic. The audience is drawn into the genius of Modigliani very eloquently, and the tension between Picasso and Modigliani is portrayed in an engaging and creative manner. I won't continue on with affected accolades on this one. Simply put, it's a great rent! Of course, you can criticize any film. I would have liked to have seen a little more of the unique artistic genius of Modigliani portrayed, but that is a minor gripe
This movie is a joke, 1 January 2006
Author: aroberts1 from United States
Being an art history major and artist I was excited to see this movie. Within the first five minutes of viewing I was very put off by the over the top over acting. Garcia is not convincing and the script is frustrating. Even if Modigliani did have soooo much bravado in real life, he surely had some complexity or depth of character to justify it. I asked myself, "Who wanted this film made and why?" The director clearly had no interest in the arts, or history or even Modigliani. An artist’s life is simply not believable and portrayed with such ridiculous over dramatization I stopped watching after the first hour. I have watched many docudramas about the art world and have never seen one so badly done as this. I have never felt so disappointed with a film.
A classic tale of alcohol-induced tragedy, 23 June 2006
Author DougThorburn from Northridge, CA
"Do you know what love is? Real love? So deeply you'd condemn yourself to eternity in hell? I do and I have." So began Jeanne Hebuterne's narration of the story of her lover, artist Amedeo Modigliani. Few movies with obvious addicts at their center excite, but this one does - because of the ease with which we can relate to the codependent, Hebuterne (played endearingly by Elsa Zylberstein), who is drawn imperceptibly into the abyss. It's a classic tale of the seeming incomprehensibility of misbehaviors keeping close people off balance, making it easy to induce them to do things they would never in their right minds consider.
Initially, Modigliani (played by Andy Garcia in a terrific role) is outwardly eccentric, exciting and charming. The visceral appeal and seduction proves impossible for Hebuterne to resist and she falls in love with Modigliani almost at first sight. Happy though he may initially appear, he increasingly becomes consumed by remorse when able to see what the aftermath of his misbehavior has wrought. When his contemporary Pablo Picasso asks after an encounter, "Why do you hate me so much?" Modigliani responds, "I love you Pablo. It is myself I hate." He tells Hebuterne, "I have nothing for you. I am nothing." When she responds, "So you'll just run away?" he bluntly states, "That's what I do best." And so it goes, with Modigliani apparently growing to believe that irresponsible behavior comprises his real self, which he loathes during moments of lucidity, while Hebuterne sees through to the real Modigliani, who is brilliant and caring.
Yet it isn't Hebuterne who tells him to stop drinking entirely; even Picasso suggests he "drink in moderation," which, as a person with alcoholism, he cannot do in the long run. It is Modigliani and Hebuterne's young son who tells him, "If you keep drinking, you'll kill us both." Although it seems an insightful observation for a child, other addiction experts (I say "other," because I've authored four books on the subject) have pointed out that child-victims see the potential for annihilation far more clearly than do others, including the spouse who is blinded by alcoholic charm and the decency they see underneath the muck of addiction. While Modigliani's binges are so apparent that everyone around him is aware of the problem, the cure - complete cessation - eludes.
His most destructive behavior generally involves periodic abandonment of his wife and child for opium and booze. However, knowing we cannot predict how destructive an addict may become or when (one of the themes of my first book, "Drunks, Drugs & Debits: How to Recognize Addicts and Avoid Financial Abuse"), we should not be surprised when at one point Modigliani is put into a straitjacket. Nor should we be shocked when he shows up four days late to paint a portrait of a benefactor, although desperately in need of funds. Later, pleading for money so he can see a doctor, a friend asks him to promise he will not drink it away. Despite his doctor's admonition that if he continues to drink and smoke opium he will not live another year, his lungs already at half capacity due to having had tuberculosis as a child, his thirst for the drugs is insatiable. In typical alcoholic fashion, when told to stop drinking and to concentrate on painting, the egomaniac created by the alcoholism responds that no one can tell him what to do.
Some critics object that the movie is confusing, alternating back and forth in time with numerous flashbacks and what may be hallucinations; but this is analogous to the life of the alcoholic, who leads a confused Jekyll and Hyde existence. While Modigliani isn't violent toward his family, the psychological abandonment conveys the experience of many victims: verbal and emotional abuse does more damage and lasts far longer, perhaps because it's easier to leave physically and detach emotionally from a violent addict. This could explain the classically tragic end. Because alcoholism provides the most certain tragedy, tragedy makes good cinema and the conflicting effect on the codependent is, for once, accurately portrayed, this is one of the best of the overtly alcoholic genre.
A magnificent production, 19 May 2005
Author: shm140 from United States
A film as magnificent, tender, and powerful as the artist, whose life story it tells. Andy Garcia deserves an Oscar for portraying Modigliani's tortured, yet tender soul. Elsa ____stein (cannot recall her last name) who plays Modigliani's wife is disarming and powerful. Omid Djalili as Picasso delivers a wonderful performance and proves himself to be worthy of playing side-by-side with Andy Garcia. The acting, directing, the sound, the music, the dialogs, the cinematography all come together to create a masterpiece that transports you to the life and times of great artists such as Modigliani, Picasso, Rivera, and many more in the early part of the 20th century. You can easily lose yourself in the passion of the movie. Listen to the music. While Edith Piaff's song is beautiful and nostalgic, the ending song of the film is mesmerizing
Wow. A great flick., 29 October 2005
Author: artzau from Sacramento, CA
Andy Garcia has always been a risk taker, playing bad guys, good guys, rats, heroes and unafraid to jump into a role that is well in the margin. Here, we find him as the enigmatic Amedeo Modigliani, the self-destructive brilliant and troubled artist of the Lost Generation hanging out in Paris after WW1. Too, the wonderful and beautiful Elsa Zylberstein favors us with a wonderful performance, departing from her usual French films. The Persian actor Omid Djalili is wonderfully arrogant and petty as Picasso, as are all of the primarily European cast.
Shown with all their warts and moles are the great painters, Picasso, Rivera, Matisse, Utrillo and the redoubtable Gertrude Stein, poet and literary critic, and Jean Cocteau, the film maker. It was an exciting era that produced some of the 20th century's greatest art and this film gives us an artistic glimpse into that world of troubled and mad world of creative individuals absolutely refusing to compromise their individuality. Of particular interest is the scene where Picasso takes Modigliani to see Renoir, the great impressionist, who has retired crippled and aging to a country villa. As they approach the room where the old man sits in a wheel chair, Picasso says, "Come and meet God." While a serious art historian might quibble with some liberties with the recorded facts, e.g., Picasso is shown with a grudgingly mutual respect more so than the chroniclers of that time report, the film does capture that cyclone of creative genius that abounded in post-war Paris at that time.
A great love story, if not entirely factual, 25 May 2005
Author: lizliz from United States
Modi and his wife had a deeply dysfunctional relationship in real life, not the idealized one we see on screen, but that's not the point. Anyone going to see this movie expecting a documentary about a painter is in the wrong theater. It may also not be an accurate portrayal of the artist himself and what motivated him. Maybe it's too hard to convey that on screen. Who alive could tell Davis who the real Modigliani was anyway? This is a love story, pure and simple, and on that level, it succeeds. Yes, there are the inconsistent accents, yes the baby is a little young. And no, a painter would never break a treasured brush in half to celebrate the completion of a painting. That out of the way, the music is perfect, amazing, gutsy and wonderful. Zylberstein is brilliant and deserves a great deal of recognition for her portrayal of Jeanne, Modi's wife. Garcia is fantastic; subtle, beautiful, deep. The supporting actors, particularly the ones who played Renoir and Picasso, were a delight. Like life and love, the film is funny, oblique, moving. and tragic. The cinematography is gritty and gorgeous, like life at the turn of the century. Go see this film and enjoy.
BAD is a euphemism..., 22 January 2006
Author: psydux from France
This grotesque portrayal of the Parisian life of artists is a waste of time. I loathed this movie for the following reasons.
First: the clichés. The couple dancing in the dark at night in the street, the little boy (Modigliani as child), Picasso being the first one to recognize Modi's talent (He applauds first), the punchline "I 'll paint your eyes when I know your soul"...I'm pretty sure the director lost a bet and had to include as many clichés as possible. Horrible.
Second: Elsa Zilberstein. What a terrible actress...especially when she screams. Totally unbearable. But she's never as bad as Modigliani's agent.
A little too clichéd, 10 May 2005
Author: niklawrence from Belgium
The look of this film is wonderful. The sets, costume, lighting are all richly done and excellent. The acting is good but the actors don't have much to work with. All the standard clichés about struggling artists in Paris in the 20's are shown here. The tortured genius, the noble poverty, the absinthe-sodden café culture. However, it all looks so good it doesn't ring true. It's portrayed as we would all like Paris in the 20's to have been, not necessarily as it really was. Modigliani in real life was so poor he was forced to move from one dive to another but here his apartment seems a dream. As for the plot it centres around his animosity with Picasso but we are never told why there is such rivalry between them. Also, his refusal at one point to work for someone who has money but no artistic appreciation strains another cliché to breaking point. Although it looks lovely in the end the film was disappointing. It's a film of misty-eyed nostalgia for arty 20's Paris but has no real substance beneath that. I guess everyone even slightly artistic would have loved to have been there at that time and this is a film that shows them what they'd like to see.
The satellites outshine the star, 11 May 2006
Author: Nozz from Israel
This is a movie about painters in Paris that tells us nothing about painting and shows us nothing of Paris. The most profound observation anyone in the movie makes about Modigliani's work is that he exaggerates the length of the neck. To add a little excitement to the mix, characters fire guns in one another's general direction (twice) and the manner of Modigliani's death is irresponsibly fictionalized. At least I consider it irresponsible, because people will come to the movie not knowing the facts and come away thinking they've learned them. Andy Garcia is to be commended for taking the title role-- Modigliani is worth a movie, and I'm sure no one set out to make it a bad one-- but he is less convincing and interesting than the supporting actors who bring Soutine, Utrillo, and especially Renoir to life.
Not a film for art lovers, 21 December 2005
Author: francophile_2002 from France
If you know anything about art or artists you won't like this film. To paraphrase the late Barry Took: there are thousands of films made, catering for all tastes, but most of them are for those who have absolutely no taste at all - and this is one of them. It is based on characters not events and most of the latter are invented: the film is after all a drama, not a documentary: the paucity of facts is acceptable, it is the lack of truth which makes this film so shallow. The characters are Modigliani and his contemporaries, most notably Picasso. With a few exceptions, the acting is wooden where it is not mechanical (Andy Garcia); the exceptions include Louis Hilyer as Zborowski, Jim Carter as Achille Hébuterne, Michelle Newell as Eudoxie Hébuterne and Hippolyte Girardot as Uttrillo, who all try to convince. The rest were simply not believable as the artists they were impersonating: mostly even they themselves gave every impression of not believing in what they were doing. Andy Garcia is too fat for the role of Modigliani, who at the end of his life was wasted by excess (e.g. alcohol) and illness and living in squalor on a diet of brandy and tinned sardines. Omid Djalili as Picasso is even fatter. The scenes of the artists painting are pure vaudeville - most of them seemingly getting more paint on themselves than on the canvas; this is not a total loss however since the paint looks decidedly better on them than on the finished paintings, which are dross. The picture of Jeanne which 'Modi' paints at the end is unbelievably bad and an insult to an artist who has pretensions to greatness: this is partly what I mean about lack of truth.
This is a film purporting to be about artists, made by someone who clearly knows nothing about art.
Leaving Las Paris, 16 March 2005
Author: bking099 from United States
Colorful and engaging Bio-Pic. Artist portrayals are always difficult to convey on the screen, and in this case, a painter comes across as self-serving, ultimately unsympathetic but full of great art. His oeuvre speaks volumes but his lifestyle results in some sad and destructive behavioral patterns that he never could outgrow. The scenes between the Big M and Pablo Picasso are the most interesting because of the tension created by the actors in each of the scenes; but Diego Rivera is reduced to bows and grunts. How do you portray inspiration? That's a puzzle. Too bad, too, because ultimately "M" left me mostly unmoved.
Has the film a USA distributor? And for who is the pic targeted? Wait till DVD, rent it; and then go to an art gallery.
Portrait of the Artist as a Collection of Clichés, 20 April 2005
Author: fuente-2 from Larvik, Norway
This more or less completely useless film is hopelessly stuck in a romantic (as in 19th century) view of the artist as a lonely, struggling genius. The film (if not its subject's life) is a catalogue of clichés: The miserable childhood, the penniless adulthood, the difficult love life, the threat of insanity, the critical incomprehension, the refusal to 'sell out' (possibly the most long-lived of romantic clichés, it's still thought to be relevant in the world of rock and roll) and the god-damned post mortem vindication are all present and accounted for. Add to this lookalikes of the usual suspects of Paris between world wars - Cocteau, Picasso, Gertrude Stein etc., - and an audience with the godlike Auguste Renoir and you get this: two hours of rehashed ideas trying to convince the viewer of an artist's originality by equating him with every stereotyped image of the troubled genius. This extreme conventionalism is hardly suited to the memory of an unconventional artist like Modigliani, is it?
Enjoyed the movie., 24 May 2005
Author: sjm9 from United States
It took a while for me to get into it, but by the end I really liked it a lot. It could have been more consistent and seamless -- the casting was so-so. In the first part of the movie the intensity of the characters didn't come across, but as the movie progressed, especially near the end, their emotions were more convincing and believable. The music was possibly the most passionate and moving part of the whole thing -- I hope a sound track is released. I liked the sets, the costumes and filming was pretty good. The subject matter was of particular interest to me as I am an artist. It's probably not for everyone and definitely not for those who like formula, action films
Mediocre, 23 May 2005
Author: loplop from United States
I really love Modigliani's work, so I was excited to see this movie.
Unfortunately, it turned out to be disappointing. While Andy Garcia is a good actor, he's an unconvincing Modigliani-- he looked much too clean, well-fed and robust for most of the film! The music was bland, terrible and out of place- instead of heightening the experience, it transformed most scenes into cheesy, sentimental, and trite. The ending was far too drawn out, and it only made the movie more clichéd and sentimental. Jeanne talks about her intense love for Modigliani at the beginning and end of the film, but we really hardly even get to see that-- her character is flat. Consequently, these "dramatic scenes" of her love for him come off as contrived and ineffective. Another thing I didn't like was the way the characters spoke. As a reviewer mentioned before, they switched from different languages and accents at the drop of a hat, which was weird. From American English to European accents to European language. It was annoying.
But, I liked Elsa Zylberstein as Jeanne. She looked just like a Modigliani painting. A good scene was the one where Modigliani and Picasso visited Renoir, as was the scene at Picasso's exhibition where one of Modigliani's paintings was shown.
But, overall, I feel that the movie was trying way too hard to be dramatic, artsy, and decadent and it really didn't accomplish any of it. I thought it was a rather contrived, emotionless effort that didn't do much justice to the artist
Those whom Gods love..., 16 January 2006
Author: Galina from Virginia, USA
I'd give this movie an award for the best imperfect movie I've ever seen or the most impressive movie that has grown on me as I watched it or the movie with the most clichéd ridiculous first hour that gradually picked up its momentum and become a film of rare beauty and incredible power. As the title suggests, this is a film about time and life of one of the most charismatic Artists of the last century, Amedeo Modigliani (1884 - 1920). Last April, I visited a wonderful exhibition of his works in Washington DC that hosted nearly 100 of his paintings, sculptures, and drawings. Modigliani's style is so unique and striking, distinguished by strong linear rhythms and simple elongated forms that it takes only seeing couple of his stunning, sensual and aesthetical portraits to never forget him. His name, "Amedeo", has such a beautiful and sad meaning, knowing the story of his short life. "Amedeo" means beloved by God, and he sure was, talented, charming, and charismatic. But as the saying goes, the ones whom the Gods love die young. Modigliani health was very poor, and his life style did not help it. He died from tuberculosis and meningitis when he was 35. His lover, his muse, and the mother of his daughter, 21 year old Jeanne Hebuterne who was pregnant with their second child by the time of Amedeo's death, did not want and could not survive him. On the day following Modigliani's death, she threw herself from the window on the fifth floor and killed herself...You may say, "How melodramatic" but life sometimes is more dramatic than any work of art or literature.
The casting of 49 year old Andy Garcia as 35 year old Modigliani seems a little strange but Garcia did his best working with the material. There was a moment in the movie when he addresses someone, "What is the matter with you?" with such obvious Brooklyn accent that I felt like watching "Godfather, part 4 ½". Actually, most of the dialogs in the first hour or so were rather unintentionally funny. It seemed to me that the director tried different approaches to his film. Modigliani came from Italy – we see many times the parade of clowns on the streets of his native Livorno as the recurring image that could have come from Fellini's films. Then, film looked in Baz Luhrmann's "Moulin-Rouge" direction with the songs and music from different epochs (and I said to myself, oh please, no). Davis also compares Modigliani's life with that of another Amadeus, struggling genius – child from 18th century Vienna –the film brought a Mozart / Salieri theme with a successful and rich fellow painter who comparing to Salieri happened to be a very talented Artist himself - Pablo Picasso. So, for the first hour, the film struggled (almost as much as its protagonist) but then, something happened. The film's creator realized that the Artists are interesting not only because of their personal problems, weaknesses, struggles, preferences but first and foremost because of their talents, of their abilities to create, to look at the world like no one before them did, to capture their impressions in the forms and images that even after they are long gone make our hearts beat faster, make us say, "This is beauty, this is poetry, this is perfection". The scenes of incredible power just come one after another, the scenes with few or no words spoken at all. Among them, Picasso's and Modigliani's visit to one of the titans of 19 century, August Renoir in his country mansion. Renoir was shown as the old, wheel chair bound man who had to be spoon–fed by his nurse but who obviously had sharp mind and more wisdom than both Picasso and Modigliani together. Later, there was a long scene showing young painters - Chaim Soutine, Maurice Utrillo, Diego Rivera, Pablo Picasso, and Amedeo Modigliani working on their paintings for the Grand Prix de Peinture, the yearly art competition at the famed Salon des Artistes. Close to the movie's end comes my favorite scene – the opening of the Salon with the presentation of each painting – there is no rivalry, no competition any more – each work of art shines and every artist is happy to admit the talent and uniqueness of his fellow competitor.
So, what do I think of "Modigliani", the movie directed by Mick Davis? I enjoyed it and I would recommend it to others. Andy Garcia, who is not my favorite actor, won me over with his performance in spite of the problems (many) with the script. I've been always interested in the period of post War World 1 Art history when everybody who was anybody tried to be in Paris, the Art Mecca for many generations of Artists and the film's depiction of the Modigliani's contemporaries was interesting and made me want to research more about them. I'd like to see more movies with the actress Elsa Zylberstein who played Jeanne – her melancholic beauty, grace and talent are undeniable and helped to make the movie based on the Artist's life compelling, convincing, and remarkable.
P.S. According to Pablo Picasso's personal physician, the Artist who had survived Modigliani by more than 50 years, whispered his name on his deathbed.
Witnessing the Bohemian Life of Paris, 1919, 6 October 2005
Author: gradyharp from United States
MODIGLIANI is a difficult movie to review. It has some very strong features such as the cinematography that captures the artsy feeling of Paris 1919 and, despite excesses, manages to create some visuals of hallucinations and the wild madness of painters painting canvasses; a rather complex peak into the lives of several of the more revolutionary artists of the time; and a substantial feeling for the interchange between artist and model. The main problem with the film is a script that is banal, limited in historical validity, and concentrating on a single rather silly motif of a painters' competition.
Amedeo Modigliani (1884 - 1920) was a Jew from Italy who moved to the mecca of Paris to create his brilliant portraits and sculptures of nudes and extended neck women and girls. His genius lay in his unifying the spiritual Eastern iconography (tribal art and Judaism) of his heritage with the Christian (read Catholic) traditions. What this film delivers is a rather annoying portrait of a young consumptive artist who drank and drugged himself to death at a moment in his career when renown was just beginning. The reasons for his place in art history are merely hinted all for the sake of the Hollywood biopic.
Andy Garcia plays Modigliani with a modicum of élan and a plethora of bad traits. The lovely model Jeanne Hébuterne (Elsa Zylberstein) who was the subject not only of his portraits but the mother of his illegitimate child and his live-in paramour does have an uncanny resemblance to Jeanne! The artists with whom 'Modi' works include Picasso, Soutine, Utrillo, and Diego Rivera.
But aside from a visually exciting experience there is really very little to be learned from this liquor and opium soaked consumptive noisy melodrama that could have been about any one of the artists involved in the story. The genius of Modigliani is barely tapped.
A Movie Worth To Be Seen, 18 August 2005
Author: sabioana
I find Modigliani a movie worth to be seen! Some of you might consider it doesn't capture the real "spirit" of that era or that it puts too much accent on the painter's madness and on his interior drama; but this is Modigliani in Mick Davis's conception, it's a movie not a documentary! The soundtrack is perfectly chosen to amplify the feelings transmitted by the excellent performance of the actors. It is more than a cinematographic production. It is a symbiosis between passion and love, human nature and vices. The memories of Amedeo about his childhood, the reproofs of "Modigliani-the little boy ", the incapacity of resisting to temptations and the permanent psychological pressure given by having such a rivalry have driven him to self-destruction. It is the destiny of a man who passed away just a moment before tasting success...
An excellent movie, 11 November 2004
Author: tmfef from Hong Kong
I was lucky to see this movie in Paris where this movie was first released in the cinemas. I was really impressed by the brilliant performances of Andy Garcia and Elsa Zylberstein and the rest of the cast. Andy Garcia is a VERY versatile and extremely talented actor. We may already know this story is about the last years' of life of the Italian painter Amedeo Modigliani and set in Paris in 1919. However this movie has a new approach and new ideas and it is not an ordinary biography movie. The spirit of Paris in that period comes alive in it. Everyone involved in this movie worked with passion and passion is actually its main theme.
I totally enjoyed seeing this movie and I hope it will be released widely and many people will be able to see it. We are all surrounded by those big blockbuster movies nowadays and it is so nice to see Modigliani, a real gem.
Beautiful Work of Theatrical Art, 11 May 2005
Author: tillou from United States
Kudos to those involved with this project which allows movie-goers to understand a little more about the private life and time of Amedeo Modigliani. And special thanks to the private funders, whose support of independent productions make movies with meaning possible -- and in this case, turned a relatively obscure dream into a wonderful reality!
This period piece is beautifully done. The acting is superb, as well as the cinematography, editing, music and writing. And did I mention the acting? Wow! Andy Garcia was brilliant, along with excellent performances by Elsa Zylberstein (as Jean Hébuterne), Omid Djalili (as Picasso) and the Romanian actor who played Renoir.
Thank you for this beautiful work which, I'm sure, will be appreciated for years to come!
An Amazing Film, an Amazing Performance, 25 December 2004
Author: Tiny-13 from 5
The story of Modigliani is well-known. However, this film gives it life with a wonderful script, amazing cinematography, and mind-blowing performances by Andy Garcia and Elsa Zylberstein, a little-known French actress. I was glued to the screen from start to finish and have recommended it to everyone. If this film, Garcia, and Zylberstein don't receive Academy Award nominations, there's something wrong with Hollywood... at least more than is already wrong with it.
Run, don't walk to the nearest theatre showing "Modigiliani"! See it while you can. It's a true find, and one that will stay with you long after you left the theatre
A Mixed Bag, 26 December 2004
This movie is very much a mixed bag. It's a good film. It's nice to watch, the acting is good, the direction is good and the story is engaging. But I feel it doesn't capture the real spirit of the era and the Paris artist community. It focuses too much on the immoral behavior and madness of the artists and leaves out the way these people viewed the world and their concepts of beauty. It's good the film tries to show the grittiness of it all, but there was so much more... I'd really have liked to see more about what drove Modigliani to paint as he did and what exactly drove him to destruction. This film only just touches on that...
It tries too much to please the American audience in their quest for standardized Hollywood stories, but on the other hand it tries to have a certain "artsy" flair that remains just polish because it lacks depth
Still you gotta see this. Not for an actual representation of Modigliani’s life or that era, just for it being a good film, dealing with passion, loyalty, madness, love and hate. See it for the atmosphere, which although not accurate, is beautiful. See it for the good acting and the wonderful chemistry between Modi and Picasso. It could've been so much more but it is what it is… good, intelligent entertainment.
MARC CHAGALL
born July 7, 1887, Vitebsk, Belorussia, Russian Empire [now in Belarus]
died March 28, 1985, Saint-Paul, Alpes-Maritimes, France
Belorussian-born French painter, printmaker, and designer. He composed his images based on emotional and poetic associations, rather than on rules of pictorial logic. Predating Surrealism, his early works, such as I and the Village (1911), were among the first expressions of psychic reality in modern art. His works in various media include setsfor plays and ballets, etchings illustrating the Bible, and stained-glass windows.
Early life and works
Chagall was born in a small city in the western Russian Empire not far from the Polish frontier. His family, which included eight other children, was devoutly Jewish and, like the majority of the some 20,000 Jews in Vitebsk, humble without being poverty-stricken; his father worked in a herring warehouse, and his mother ran a shop where she sold fish, flour, sugar, and spices. The young Chagall attended the heder (Jewish elementary school) and later went to thelocal public school, where instruction was in Russian. After learning the elements of drawing at school, he studied painting in the studio of a local realist, Jehuda Pen, and in 1907 went to St. Petersburg, where he studied intermittently for three years, eventually under the stage designer Léon Bakst. Characteristic works by Chagall fromthis period of early maturity are the nightmarish The Dead Man (1908), which depicts a roof violinist (a favourite motif), and My Fiancée with Black Gloves (1909), in which a portrait becomes an occasion for the artist to experiment with arranging black and white.
In 1910, with a living allowance provided by a St. Petersburg patron, Chagall went to Paris. After a year and a half in Montparnasse, he moved into a studio on the edge of town in the ramshackle settlement for bohemian artists that was known as La Ruche (“the Beehive”). There, he met the avant-garde poets Blaise Cendrars, Max Jacob, and Guillaume Apollinaire, as well as a number of young painters destined to become famous: the Expressionist Chaim Soutine, the abstract colourist Robert Delaunay, and the Cubists Albert Gleizes, Jean Metzinger, Fernand Léger, and André Lhote. In such company nearly every sort of pictorial audacity was encouraged, and Chagall responded to the stimulus by rapidly developing the poetic and seemingly irrational tendencies hehad begun to display in Russia. At the same time, under the influence of the Impressionist, Post-Impressionist, and Fauvist pictures he saw in Paris museums and commercial galleries, he gave up the usually sombre palette he had employed at home.
Maturity
The four years of his first stay in the French capital are often considered Chagall's best phase. Representative works are Self-Portrait with Seven Fingers (1912), I and the Village (1911), Hommage à Apollinaire (1911–12), Calvary (1912), The Fiddler (1912), and Paris Through the Window (1913). In these pictures Chagall was already essentially the artist he would continue to be for the next 60 years. His colours, although occasionally thin, were beginning to show the characteristic complexity and resonance he would eventually achieve. The often whimsical figurative elements, frequently upside down, are distributed on the canvas in an arbitrary fashion, producing an effect that sometimes resembles a film montage and suggests the inner space of a reverie. The general atmosphere of these works can imply a Yiddish joke, a Russian fairy tale, or a vaudeville turn. Often the principal character is the romantically handsome, curly-haired young painter himself. Memories of childhood and of Vitebsk were major sources of imagery for Chagall during this period.
After exhibiting in the annual Paris Salon des Indépendants and Salon d'Automne, Chagall had his first solo show in Berlin in 1914, in the gallery of the Modernist publication Der Sturm, and he made a strong impression on German Expressionist circles. After visiting the exhibition, he went onto Vitebsk, where he was stranded by the outbreak of World War I. Working for the moment in a relatively realistic style, Chagall painted local scenes and a series of studies of old men; examples ofthe series are The Praying Jew (or The Rabbi of Vitebsk, 1914) and Jew in Green (1914). In 1915 hemarried Bella Rosenfeld, the daughter of a wealthy Vitebsk merchant; among the many paintings in which she appears from this date onward are the depiction of flying lovers entitled Birthday (1915–23) and the high-spirited, acrobatic Double Portrait with a Glass of Wine (1917).
Chagall was initially enthusiastic about the Russian Revolution of October 1917; he became commissar for art in the Vitebsk region and launched into ambitious projects for a local art academy and museum. But after two and a half years of intense activity, marked by increasingly bitter aesthetic and political quarrels with the faculty of the art academy, he gave up and moved to Moscow. There he turned his attention for a while to the stage, producing the sets and costumes for plays by the Jewish writer Sholem Aleichem and murals for the Kamerny Theatre. In 1922 Chagall left Russia for good, going first to Berlin, where he discovered that a large number of the pictures he had left behind in 1914 had disappeared. In 1923, this time with a wife and daughter, he settled once again in Paris.
Chagall had learned the techniques of engraving while in Berlin. Through his friend Cendrars he met the Paris art dealer and publisher Ambroise Vollard, who in 1923 commissioned him to create a series of etchings to illustrate a special edition of Nikolay Gogol's novel Dead Souls, and thus launched Chagall on a long career as a printmaker. During the next three years, Chagall executed 107 full-page plates for the Gogol book. By then Vollard had a new idea: an edition of French poet Jean de La Fontaine's Fables, with coloured illustrations resembling 18th-century prints. Chagall prepared 100 gouaches for reproduction, but it soon became evident that his colours were too complex for the printing process envisaged. He switched to black-and-white etchings, completing the plates in 1931. By this time Vollard had come up with still another commission: a series of etchings illustrating the Bible. Chagall had completed 66 plates by 1939, when World War II and the death of Vollard halted work on the project; with the project renewed in the postwar years, Chagall eventually completed 105 plates. The Paris publisher E. Tériade, picking up where Vollard had left off, issued Dead Souls in 1948 (with 11 more etchings for the chapter headings, making 118 in all), La Fontaine's Fables in 1952 (with two cover etchings, making 102 in all), and the Bible in 1956. Along with these much delayed ventures, in the 1920s Chagall also produced a number of smaller collections of engravings, many single plates, and an impressive quantity of coloured lithographs and monotypes.
During the 1920s and early '30s, Chagall painted fewer large canvases, and his work became moreobviously poetical and popular with the general public. Examples are Bride and Groom with Eiffel Tower (1928) and The Circus (1931). With Hitler's rise to power, however, and the growing threat of a new world conflict, the artist began to have visions of a very different sort, which are reflected in the powerful White Crucifixion (1938). In this painting, Jewish and Christian symbols are conflated in a depiction of German Jews terrorized by a Nazi mob; the crucified Christ at the centerof the composition is wrapped in a tallith, a Jewish prayer shawl.
Throughout this interwar period Chagall traveled extensively, working in Brittany in 1924, in southern France in 1926, in Palestine in 1931 (as preparation for the Bible etchings), and, between 1932 and 1937, in Holland, Spain, Poland, and Italy. In 1931 his autobiography, My Life, was published. His reputation as a modern master was confirmed by a large retrospective exhibition in 1933 at the Kunsthalle in Basel, Switzerland.
Late career
With the outbreak of World War II, Chagall moved to the Loire districtof France and then, as the Nazi menace for all European Jews became increasingly real, further and further south. Finally, in July 1941, he and his family took refuge in the United States; he spent most of the next few years in and around New York City. For a while Chagall continued to develop themes he had already treated in France; typical works of this period are the Yellow Crucifixion (1943) and The Feathers and the Flowers (1943). But in 1944 his wife Bella died, and memories of her, often in a Vitebsk setting, became a recurring pictorial motif. She appears as a weeping wife and a phantom bride in Around Her (1945) and, again, as the bride in The Wedding Candles (1945) and Nocturne (1947).
In 1945 Chagall designed the backdrops and costumes for a New York production of Igor Stravinsky's ballet The Firebird. He was honoured with a large retrospective exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1946 and at the Art Institute of Chicago a few months later.
In 1948 Chagall settled again in France, first in the suburbs of Paris and finally on the French Riviera at Vence and nearby Saint-Paul. Between 1953 and 1956, without forgetting his native Vitebsk, he produced a series of paintings inspired by his affection for Paris.
Chagall was prolific for the last 30 years of his life, continuing to paint on canvas while completing many large public projects in other media. He mastered the difficult art of stained glass in the late 1950s, and he designed a number of windows at international locations such as the Cathedral of Metz in France (1958–60), the synagogue of the Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center in Jerusalem (1960–61), the United Nations building in New York (1964), and the Art Institute of Chicago (1977). His stained-glass windows are often considered to be some of the strongest work of his late career; the medium's capacity for brilliant colour was perfectly suited to his magical imagery.
Chagall also remained involved in theatre design, completing a number of projects for the Paris Opéra and the New York Metropolitan Opera, including his highly regarded set and costume designs for the 1967 production of Mozart's The Magic Flute. In 1973 the Museum of the Marc Chagall Biblical Message was dedicated at Nice, France, and in 1977 France honoured him with a retrospective exhibition at the Louvre in Paris.
Assessment
Chagall's repertory of images, including massive bouquets, melancholy clowns, flying lovers, fantastic animals, biblical prophets,and fiddlers on roofs, helped to make him one of the most popular major innovators of the 20th-century School of Paris. He presented dreamlike subject matter in rich colours and in a fluent, painterly style that—while reflecting an awareness of artistic movements suchas Expressionism, Cubism, and even abstraction—remained invariably personal. Although critics sometimes complained of facile sentiments, uneven quality, and an excessive repetition of motifs in the artist's large total output, there is agreement that at its best it reached a level of visual metaphor seldom attempted in modern art.
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