Raoul Dufy: A Celebration of Beauty

French artist Raoul Dufy (1877-1953) saw the world in hues that others can scarcely imagine.  Having studied as an artist during the time of impressionism, he used his attention to light and spontaneity along with fauvism's flat, bold palette to develop a unique personal style filled with wit, lyrical line, and sumptuous color. The artist worked across mediums, and among his creations are numerous paintings and drawings, illustrations for about fifty literary works, about fifty tapestries, more than 200 ceramic pieces, and nearly 5,000 fabric designs.  Themes developed and recurred throughout his work and ranged from boating and horse racing to flowers and music.

In recent years, Raoul Dufy has been increasingly recognized for his work as a painter, but he was also one of the great innovators of twentieth-century textile design, though this aspect of his work has remained relatively unknown. While working with couturier Paul Poiret, and between 1912 and 1928 with Bianchini-Ferier (the leading French silk manufacturer), Dufy created a wealth of original Art Deco designs in silks, dress fabrics, and wall hangings. Dufy's fabrics were stunning, and Poriet used them extensively in his fashions, creating magnificent coats, capes, and dresses in sumptuous silk brocades block-printed with large designs. Dufy transformed the face of fashion and fabric design, formulated practically all modern fabric design between 1909 and 1930, and his style radically influenced the popular arts and the commercial design of the Western world. Even today, his vision informs the color, design, texture, and imagery of a wide range of products such as book covers, perfumes, posters and stage decor, and textiles for furniture and clothing.

Raoul Dufy:  A Celebration of Beauty celebrates Dufy's joie de vivre and his appreciation of beauty through the presentation of more than 200 works of art. The exhibition includes about 100 paintings, watercolors, drawings, and woodcuts from European private collections - the great majority never exhibited before in North America - and nearly 100 original silk fabrics and fabric designs presented from the archives of Bianchini-Ferier in Lyon, France, offering an unprecedented view of the oeuvre of Dufy. Also featured in the exhibition are more than ten dresses that include designs by Mongi Guibane and Christian LaCroix, using Dufy fabric designs. Other highlights of the exhibition included two examples of the spectacular silk brocade fabric Chevaux Marins, designed by Dufy, and used by Paul Poriet for an evening dress that was displayed at the 1925 Exposition des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes, and the beautiful brocaded silk fabrics that Dufy designed during the 1920s, inspired by the woodcuts he created for Guillaume Apollinare's book Le Bestiaire, ou Cortege d'Orphee.  Dufy's art shows a profound sensibility and springs from a joyful meditation that radiates a sense of elation. Dufy discovered an infinite richness in daily life, and his creative imagination produced a visual poetry that glorifies life in all its manifestations.

Click here to view a short video of Look Around Mississippi with Walt Grayson on this exhibition.

Click here to visit Mississippi Public Broadcasting "Educator Express" to download teacher materials for this exhibtion.

Click here to view the article on this exhibition from Veranda magazine.







See pics from Technicolor New Year's Eve!