TM_pageTopDivider.gif

Spanish Sojourns: Robert Henri and the Spirit of Spain

Jepson Center October 18, 2013 - May 4, 2014

Portrait of El Matador Felix Asiego - LeClair familySpanish Sojourns will be the first exhibition to explore the Spanish paintings of Robert Henri. Widely celebrated as both an artist and a teacher, Henri also played a pivotal role in the history of American art as one of the key organizers of the progressive 1908 exhibition of the Eight, and throughout his career championed the realistic portrayal of contemporary life.

Spain and its people held a particular fascination for Henri, who was attracted to the nation’s sunny climate, ancient culture, and spirited citizens. He first visited Spain in 1900, and returned six times between 1906 and 1926, often for extended stays. An avid traveler, Henri returned to Spain more than any other destination. He produced some of his boldest and most compelling likenesses there, drawing from a wide range of bohemian cultural figures including singers, dancers, musicians, bullfighters, gypsies, and peasants. He was attracted by the emotionalism and wild undercurrent he perceived in the Spanish temperament, and by Spanish traditions of music, dance, and bullfighting.   Henri’s Spanish portraits also reflect his admiration for the great Spanish masters Diego Velasquez and Francisco Goya, whose works he studied closely.

Spanish Sojourns opens at the Telfair in the fall of 2013 and will travel to two additional venues thereafter.

Blind Singers - Hirshhorn

Top:  Robert Henri (American, 1865-1929);  Portrait of El Matador, Felix Asiego, 1906;  Oil on canvas;  77 x 36 inches;  LeClair family Collection, Charlotte, North Carolina
Bottom:  Robert Henri (American, 1865-1929);  Blind Singers, 1912;  Oil on canvas;  33  ¼ x 41  ¼ inches;  Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC; Gift of the Joseph H. Hirshhorn Foundation, 1966