Judit Reigl

Judit Reigl (Judit Némedy, 1 May 1923 – 6 August 2020)[1] was a Hungarian painter who lived in France.

Judit Reigl in her studio in Marcoussis, February 2012

Biography

Reigl attended the Hungarian University of Fine Arts from 1942 to 1945 where she was the student of the celebrated painter István Szőnyi. She was awarded a scholarship from the Academy of Hungary in Rome which allowed her to study in Italy between 1947 and 1948.[2] During her studies there she encountered Byzantine icons, the mosaics of Ravenna, the works of Giotto and Masaccio and the paintings of Venice's Giorgione and Titian amongst others.[3]

In 1950, when the Iron Curtain had divided Hungary and Western Europe, Reigl succeeded in crossing into Western Europe after eight previous attempts. She explained that her home country of Hungary solely commissioned her to paint portraits of ruling Communist leaders such as Stalin, Rákosi and Gerő, and so her defection to the West was necessary to preserve her artistic freedom. Reigl eventually reached Paris by crossing through Austria, Switzerland, Germany and Belgium where she lived from 1950 to 1963. In 1963 she moved to Marcoussis (Île-de-France).[4]

Influences and impact

Four years after arriving in Paris, in May 1945, Simon Hantaï, a fellow Hungarian émigré, introduced Reigl to André Breton. Known as the Pope of Surrealism, Breton welcomed Reigl into his circle of Surrealist artists and their influence is evident in her early work. She read authors such as Le Comte de Lautréamont and Arthur Rimbaud, whose texts were seminal for the Surrealists.[5] Reigl eventually moved away from Surrealism and towards Lyrical Abstraction. Georges Mathieu, one of the greatest French Lyrical Abstractionists, was one of Reigl's significant influences during this period. Both series garnered Reigl much success in France as well as in West Germany and in the United States, where she familiarized herself with the American Abstract Expressionists such as Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline.

Reigl exhibited her work in France beginning in 1954. For her first exhibition, the prologue to the catalogue was written by André Breton. Her works are primarily found in the collections of French museums, including the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Musée National d'Art Moderne and Musée de Grenoble.[4] Her works were only displayed in Hungary starting in the mid-2000s.

Artwork

Reigl's early works from her Surrealist period combine elements of photo collage with a mixture of figurative and more abstract elements (Incomparable Pleasure, 1952–53). She later expanded her use of collages from 1953 to 1955 using images from popular magazines and newspapers. Although these smaller photo collages weren't included in her inaugural exhibition at André Breton’s galerie À l'Étoile scellée, they still align with the Surrealist movement through their bizarre juxtapositions, dreamlike scenarios and transfigured bodies. Most of her paintings which were included in the show at galerie À l'Étoile scellée are more abstract, the exhibited canvases were Reigl's first experimentation with automatic writing, a technique that recurs in various forms throughout her oeuvre. Reigl's automatism arode from instinctive gestures of her body and showcases movement, levitation, tension and changes in processes, rhythms and roots of existence on spectacular large canvases. Figurative- and non-figurative representation was for her a question of encoding and de-coding but may also be anthropomorphic.[6]

Reigl used her body as her primary instrument when creating the series Outburst (Éclatement) which she began in 1955. The Outbursts series is different from her earlier paintings with automatic writing in that they no longer used improvised metal tools to make spontaneous gestural marks. She began with throwing thick industrial pigment mixed with linseed oil onto the canvas with her hands and continued by vigorously scraping it from the center to the edges with a tool. In a 1956 Outburst in the collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the relatively spare composition is punctuated by thick impastos or forceful marks. The artist later explained this time in her life as a transitional period when she severed her ties with the Surrealists. The Outbursts are explosions of mass, radiating from a center as bursts of pure energy.[6]

For her following series Mass Writing (Écriture en masse), Reigl applied large volumes of thick, slow-drying black pigment to the canvas using a blade or a stick, and then painted with upward strokes. In these works, the black areas are dispersed outward toward the edges of the canvas. While working on these canvases, Reigl inadvertently began in 1958 working on an innovative oeuvre of paintings called Guanos, in which she reworked rejected canvases that had been covering the floor of her studio. The textured surface of these paintings evoke the archeological which was further affirmed by the artist herself when she referred to the canvases becoming "fertile ground" for new paintings.[6]

Some of her subsequent series include Man, Drap/décodage and Facing... (Face à...). They display Reigl's desire for liberation from her own body by investigating the human figure. Other Reigl series such as Writings after Music (Écritures d'après musique) and Unfolding (Déroulement) are based around the central theme of music. In Writings after Music, she transcribes musical notes into concrete visual signs. Scholars characterize the creative process of Unfolding as a type of dance in which the artist develops a unique form of visual calligraphy by combining gesture and innovative painting techniques.[6]

Exhibitions (selection)

Solo exhibitions[7]

  • 1954 • Galerie l'Étoile Scellée, Paris
  • 1956 • Galerie Kléber, Paris
  • 1958 • Galerie Van de Loo, Munich • Gallery Drian, London
  • 1959, 1962 • Galerie Kléber, Paris
  • 1960 • Galerie Van de Loo, Essen, Germany
  • 1961 • Kunstverein, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany
  • 1966 • Galerie Van de Loo, Munich
  • 1972 • Rétrospective 1952-1972, M. J. C. de la Vallée de Chevreuse, Bures-sur-Yvette • Rétrospective 1952-1972, I. N. P. E., Marly le Roi • Galerie Rencontres, Paris
  • 1973 • Galerie Rencontres, Paris
  • 1974 • Galerie Rencontres, Paris Maison de la Culture, Rennes, France
  • 1975 • Galerie Rencontres, Paris
  • 1976 • Galerie Rencontres, Paris • A.R.C. 2, Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris
  • 1978 • Galerie Yvon Lambert, Paris • Musée de Peinture, Grenoble, France
  • 1979, 1981 • Galerie Jolliet, Québec
  • 1980 • Galerie Yvon Lambert, Paris
  • 1982, 1984 • Galerie Jolliet, Montreal • Galerie de France, Paris
  • 1985 • Galerie de France, Paris • Musée d'Evreux, Ancien Evechê, France
  • 1989 • Centre d'Arts Contemporains, Orléans
  • 1989–1990 • FRAC Auvergne, Clermont-Ferrand, France
  • 1992 • Musée de Brou, Bourg-en-Bresse, France • Galerie de France, Paris
  • 1994 • Donation Goreli, Musée National d'Art Moderne, Paris
  • 2001 • Musée de Brou, Bourg-en-Bresse, France
  • 2005 • Reigl, Múcsarnok Kunsthalle, Budapest
  • 2013 • Entrée - Sortie, W&K Wienerroither & Kohlbacher, Vienna
  • 2013 • Entrance - Exit (1986–89), Shepherd W&K Galleries, New York
  • 2014 • Emptiness and Ecstasy (artist’s title: Void and Space), Ludwig Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest
  • 2016 • Body of Music, Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, USA
  • 2018 • Dance of Death, Shepherd W&K Galleries, New York
  • 2018 • Late Works, Janos Gat Gallery, NY at Prisme, Paris

Group exhibitions[7]

  • 1944 • VII. Nemzeti Képzőművészeti Kiállítás, Hall of Art, Budapest
  • 1947 • Hungarian Academy, Rome
  • 1948 • Mostra de Pittura e Scultura Ungherese Contemporanea, Catania, Italy
  • 1956 • Cinq oeuvres nouvelles Galerie René Drouin, Paris
  • 1957, 1958 • Galerie Kléber, Paris
  • 1960 • Form, Struktur, Bedeutung, Städtisches Galerie, Munich
  • 1963 • Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lausanne, Switzerland
  • 1964 • Guggenheim International Award, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
  • 1966 • Salon de Mai, Paris
  • 1967–1968 • Museum of Arts, Carnegie Foundation, Pittsburgh
  • 1969 • L'oeil écoute. Exposition Internationale d'Art Contemporain, Palais des Papes, Avignon, France
  • 1970 • Un art subjectif, Centre d'Art Contemporain de l'Abbaye de Beaulieu, Beaulieu, France
  • 1972 • Six from Europe, Phoenix Gallery, Pittsburgh
  • 1973 • l'Espace lyrique, Centre d'Art Contemporaine de Beaulieu, Beaulieu, France
  • 1974–1975 • Galerie Rencontres, Paris
  • 1976 • Art Contemporaine 2, Musée d'Art Moderne, Paris
  • 1977 • 3 collections... 3 villes • l'avant-garde 1960-1976, Musée Cantini Marseille, France
  • 1978 • Galerie Yvon Lambert, Paris • Aspects de l'art en France, Art 9'78, Basel
  • 1979 • Tendances de l'art en France, A.R.C, Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris
  • 1981 • Bram van Velde, Simon Hantaϊ, Judith Reigl..., M. Sainte-Croix, Poitiers, France
  • 1982 • The subject of painting, Museum of Modern Art, Oxford • Tisztelet a szülőföldnek. Külföldön élő magyar származású művészek II. kiállítása, Hall of Art, Budapest
  • 1983–1984 • Vingt ans d'art en France 1960-1980, Mittelrheinische Landesmuseum, Mainz, Germany
  • 1984 • Nouvelles acquisitions pour le Musée de Picardie, Musée d'Amiens, Amiens, France
  • 1985 • Acquisitions 49 et autres pièces, Galerie Nationale, Beauvais, France
  • 1988 • Art pour l'Afrique, Musée des Arts Africains et Océaniens, Paris
  • 1989 • Art Abstrait 1970-1987, Galerie Maeght, Paris • I surrealisti, Palazzo Reale, Milan
  • 1990 • Stirn Kunsthalle am Römerberg, Frankfurt am Main
  • 1991 • André Breton, Musée National d'Art Moderne, Paris
  • 1992 • Art expérimental en Europe 1946-1956, Musée d'Art Contemporain, Las Palmas • Francia kortárs művészet, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest
  • 1993 • Peinture en France 1960-1980, Musée d'Art Contemporain, Toulouse. France
  • 1995 • G. Maeght, Barcelona
  • 1996 • La dimension du corps, National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
  • 1997 • Made in France 1947-1997, Musée National d'Art Moderne, Paris
  • 1997–1998 • Abstraction en France 1940-1965, Collection du Centre Georges Pompidou, Colmar, France
  • 2001 • D'Alechinsky à Zao Wou ki, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
  • 2011 • Surrealism: The Poetry of Dreams, Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane
  • 2012 • 4ème rotation – Vitrines et niches (collections modernes), Musée national d’art moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
  • 2014 • International Abstraction, 1949–1960, Kobra Museum for Modern Art, Amstelveen
  • 2018 • Epic Abstraction: Pollock to Herrera, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Awards

  • Guggenheim International Award (New York City, 1964)[8]
  • Carnegie Award (Pittsburgh, 1967–68)[9]
  • Commander's Cross of Order of Merit of the Republic of Hungary (Budapest, 2008)
  • Kossuth Prize (Budapest, 2011)[10]

References

  1. Wilson, Sarah (19 August 2020). "Judit Reigl obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  2. Birkhofer, Denise (2016). Judit Reigl: Body of Music. Allen Memorial Art Museum in association with the Fonds de Dotation Judit Reigl, Marcouddid, France. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-692-57954-1.
  3. Passuth, Krisztina (July 2007). Judit Reigl September 20 – November 24, 2007. New York: Janos Gat.
  4. "Judit Reigl website". Judit Reigl.
  5. Birkhofer, Denise (2016). Judit Reigl: Body of Music. Allen Memorial Art Museum in association with the Fonds de Dotation Judit Reigl, Marcouddid, France. p. 16. ISBN 978-0-692-57954-1.
  6. Birkhofer, Denise (2016). Judit Reigl: Body of Music. Allen Memorial Art Museum in association with the Fonds de Dotation Judit Reigl, Marcouddid, France. ISBN 978-0-692-57954-1.
  7. "Judit Reigl exhibitions". artportal.hu. artportal.hu.
  8. "Judit Reigl Guggenheim Award". guggenheim.org. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.
  9. "Judit Reigl Carnegie Award". Art in America. Art in America.
  10. "Judit Reigl Kossuth Prize". artportal.hu. artportal.hu.
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