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The End of the World, 1955-1956, oil on canvas, 49 × 59 cm. Photo: Lazar Pejović.Left: The Cyclist, 1955, oil on canvas, 84,5 × 69 cm. Photo: Centre Pompidou, MNAM-CCI⁄Philippe Migeat⁄Dist. GrandPalaisRmn.
Created in Belgrade in 1955, The Cyclist is the only painting from Dado’s Yugoslav period in the collection of a French museum. This work, one of only a few for which he made a preparatory study, was acquired by Daniel Cordier shortly after Dado arrived in France, in 1956. Everything about its production reflects his (already longstanding) break with an academic style and with the influence of Emil Nolde, whose work had meant so much to him in his youth. Like The End of the World (1955, Cetinje, National Museum of Montenegro), The Cyclist forms part of the series of “mechanical paintings” inspired “by De Chirico, by Carrà, by the first Surrealists”, according to Dado’s own account. It is painted on a piece of linen taken from a mattress in the hospital where his father worked; one of the seams of the mattress is visible as a vertical line down the painting.
The grotesque figure represented here, part-robot, part-baby — a recurring motif in Dado’s early work — is holding a kind of metal doll, foreshadowing the “war and disaster doll” (Claude Louis-Combet, Maison Européenne de la Photographie lecture, 2014) which was to appear among his bronzes from the 2000s. It is cobbled together from an assortment of manufactured components, and is positioned in the midst of a jumble of toys and unlikely objects, such as the headless, limbless female mannequin flaunting its genitals. These bizarre components and hardware are reminiscent of a locksmith’s workshop — that of the father of a childhood friend, whose portrait appears on the back of the preliminary sketch for The Cyclist. One might see the principal figure, a pencil behind his ear, as a self-portrait of Dado in post-war Belgrade. In 1969, nine years after he moved to Hérouval (in the Vexin Français), where he concentrated on developing a body of work in complete sympathy with nature, he told Germain Viatte and Marcel Billot, “In the kind of chaos that a big city offers, I found myself completely blown up, torn apart”. Confronted as he was with the dehumanising effects of urban life, Dado here incorporates some of its motifs: the inscriptions and drawings on the left wall, ubiquitous in the graphic work of this period, recall advertisements in the football stadiums of Belgrade, but also graffiti more generally. That “authentic” urban mode of expression was to fascinate Dado, who in 1994, at the height of the Yugoslav conflict, took on the project of modifying some graffiti he discovered in an old winery cellar in the Hérault, Les Orpellières, to create a “Guernica in colour” (Alain Jouffroy, Artpress, July 1999), a huge work in situ. The Cyclist was painted after Dado had briefly been incarcerated, along with some other fringe elements in Belgrade, during Khrushchev’s official visit in May 1955. The abortive pedalling motions of this baby robot on its machine complete with number-plate also expresses the impetus underlying the work, Dado’s mixed feelings about the “religion of man” advocated by Tito’s Communist regime, a religion which he professed throughout his life, though never ceasing to explore its repression.
Presented at the “Antagonisms” exhibition of Julien Alvard and François Mathey at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in January 1960 ¹, The Sorcerer, dated 1959, is a painting from Dado’s mineral period. It depicts an androgynous figure with a stoney body, seated on a stool, wearing a realistic pair of shoes, flanked by two cats, one of which has a face which is almost human. Dado painted this picture in his first real studio, a disused cinema in Courcelles-lès-Gisors in the French county of Vexin, which he had moved into in 1958 thanks to Daniel Cordier, his first dealer. Steeped in the light of the Vexin, the artist’s new adopted region, The Sorcerer is a medium-format mineral “portrait”, like The Architect (1959, 162.5 × 130 cm, Centre Pompidou, Musée National d’Art Moderne) or Character with Bats (1960, 146 × 114 cm, Treger/Saint Silvestre Collection, Portugal). Protagonist, cats, vegetation, floor and wall all merge indiscriminately. The confusion of the kingdoms is evident, while the boundaries between plant, animal and mineral blur to the point of vertigo, forming a whole characteristic of Dado’s style from the Cordier period, the most recognisable of all.
In the works of this “mineral” period, the wall is a key motif. Here we can clearly see bits of wall, in which the bricks seem to crumble. This organic wall, in decomposition, is partially covered with flat areas of sky blue, and in its upper part a character seems to want to intrude (or extract himself?). In 1969, Dado underlined his fascination for the walls of the Vexin to Germain Viatte and Marcel Billot during his interview for the catalogue of the retrospective at the Centre National d’Art Contemporain (January 1970): “These famous walls of the Vexin inspired me, like my home of Montenegro at the very beginning, which is at the origin of a certain inspiration. There is this sort of mixture of elements...”².
The walls of the Vexin reactivate in Dado the memory of the mountainous landscapes of “his dear Montenegro” and a fascination for the texture of the stone that goes back to childhood – much later, Dado will confide that he would observe the wall for hours on end: this construction “;made of large square stones, rather than cement” ³ of the family house in Cetinje, which constituted “a barrier that separated [his] world from the rest of the world” ⁴. It is therefore easy to understand why Jean Dubuffet’s work, and particularly his Texturologies, which the artist discovered at the Daniel Cordier Gallery in 1959 ⁵, spoke so much to Dado.
Still from the movie The Picture of Dorian Gray directed by Albert Lewin (1945).
But what makes The Sorcerer specific is another influence, that of the magic realism of the American painter Ivan Albright (1897-1983), whom Dado discovered early on in Montenegro, from the middle of the 1940s, in Life magazine ⁶ and through Albert Lewin’s film, The Portrait of Dorian Gray (1945): “I saw the film of Dorian Gray and soon that I was that tall. [...] Ivan Albright, he was really the painter who fascinated me the most.” ⁷ In The Sorcerer, the cat on the left of the stoney character inevitably evokes the statuette of the Egyptian cat with supposed magical powers before which the hero of Lewin’s film expresses the wish that his portrait would age in its place, and which appears precisely on the left, in the same position, posed on a pedestal table, in the portrait of aged Dorian Gray painted by Albright.
One might wonder who the sorcerer is in Dado’s painting: is it the seated figure or the cat with the piercing gaze, who transformed this human being into a creature with a stoney body?
Exhibited
« Antagonismes », Musée des arts décoratifs, Palais du Louvre-Pavillon de Marsan, Paris, February-March 1960; catalogue, p. 53, illustrated
« Dado. Collection Daniel Cordier », Galerie Chave, Vence, July-October 2004; catalogue, p. 12. Text by Philippe Dagen.
Literature
Alain Bosquet, Dado. Un univers sans repos, Paris, Éditions de la Différence, 1991, p. 113 and p. 309.
1. This exhibition “marked the first recognition by a French museum of lyrical abstraction, abstract expressionism and informal art as an international trend. It shows the French art scene by giving an important place to foreign artists living in Paris” (“Chronology, 1944-1972” in Jean-Paul Ameline (ed.), Paris et nulle part ailleurs. 24 foreign artists in Paris, Exh. Cat., Paris, 2022, p. 197). See also: “La peinture d’avant-garde va présenter ses ‘antagonismes’”, Le Monde, 29 January 1960. 2. Dado, Interview with Germain Viatte and Marcel Billot on the occasion of the retrospective at the CNAC in January 1970, 1969, reprinted in Peindre debout, ed. by Amarante Szidon, foreword by Anne Tronche, Strasbourg, 2016, p. 65. 3. Dado, Interview with Michel Braticevic, in Peindre debout, op. cit. p. 156. 4. Ibid. 5. Referring to his arrival in Paris in 1956 and his discovery of contemporary art, Dado stated, “Dubuffet, of course, was the only painter that mattered to me [...] there was nothing else on the Parisian scene” (Dado, Interview with Germain Viatte and Marcel Billot, art. cit., p. 56). 6. Probably by the article “Ten Years of American Art”, Life, November 25, 1946, in which Woman, a masterpiece from the MoMA collections, is reproduced. 7. Dado, interview with Hans Ruedi Giger, Herouval, September 1997, unpublished video archive by Pascal Szidon. The Swiss artist is showing Dado the homage he paid to him in his monograph published by Taschen in 1997, in which he describes him as “the Jerome Bosch of the 20th century”, and in which he evokes the possible influence of Ivan Albright and his Portrait of Dorian Gray, which Dado immediately confirms by telling him how accurate this intuition is. Another testimony of Dado’s admiration for Albright, as he recalls his first visit to MoMA in 1962 to Christian Derouet: “At the New York museum, there was an American who I liked a lot, Albright, a guy from Chicago, who had quite a few paintings at the 1956 Venice Biennale. Because in 1956, there was a Biennale in Venice, where Albright’s paintings were exhibited. And when I saw them in real life, in the original, I liked them a little less. It was a bit dry and thin as a touch. I was a little bit disappointed. But in the art books, I liked his characters a lot. There was even a film, The Portrait of Dorian Gray, where Albright made a painting with a face...” (Dado, Conversation with Christian Derouet, 1988, to be published at Atelier contemporain in 2023 (ed. by Amarante Szidon, postface by Christian Derouet).