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Wikipedia

Marc Chagall

Marc Chagall[a] (born Moishe Shagal; 6 July [O.S. 24 June] 1887 – 28 March 1985) was a Russian-French artist.[2][1] An early modernist, he was associated with several major artistic styles and created works in a wide range of artistic formats, including painting, drawings, book illustrations, stained glass, stage sets, ceramics, tapestries and fine art prints.

Marc Chagall
Chagall, c. 1920
Born
Moishe Shagal

(1887-07-06)6 July 1887 (N.S.)
Died28 March 1985(1985-03-28) (aged 97)
NationalityRussian, later French[2]
Known for
Notable workSee list of artworks by Marc Chagall
Movement
Spouses
  • (m. 1915; died 1944)
  • Valentina (Vava) Brodsky
    (m. 1952)
    [3]
Children
  • Ida Chagall (with Bella Chagall)
  • David McNeil (with Virginia Haggard McNeil)[4]

Born in the Russian Empire, today Belarus, he was of Jewish origin. Before World War I, he travelled between Saint Petersburg, Paris, and Berlin. During this period he created his own mixture and style of modern art based on his idea of Eastern Europe and Jewish folk culture. He spent the wartime years in Belarus, becoming one of the country's most distinguished artists and a member of the modernist avant-garde, founding the Vitebsk Arts College before leaving again for Paris in 1923.

Art critic Robert Hughes referred to Chagall as "the quintessential Jewish artist of the twentieth century". According to art historian Michael J. Lewis, Chagall was considered to be "the last survivor of the first generation of European modernists". For decades, he "had also been respected as the world's pre-eminent Jewish artist".[8] Using the medium of stained glass, he produced windows for the cathedrals of Reims and Metz as well as the Fraumünster in Zürich, windows for the UN and the Art Institute of Chicago and the Jerusalem Windows in Israel. He also did large-scale paintings, including part of the ceiling of the Paris Opéra.

He had two basic reputations, writes Lewis: as a pioneer of modernism and as a major Jewish artist. He experienced modernism's "golden age" in Paris, where "he synthesized the art forms of Cubism, Symbolism, and Fauvism, and the influence of Fauvism gave rise to Surrealism". Yet throughout these phases of his style "he remained most emphatically a Jewish artist, whose work was one long dreamy reverie of life in his native village of Vitebsk."[9] "When Matisse dies," Pablo Picasso remarked in the 1950s, "Chagall will be the only painter left who understands what colour really is".[10]

Early life and education

Early life

 
Marc Chagall's childhood home in Vitebsk, Belarus. Currently site of the Marc Chagall Museum.
 
Marc Chagall, 1912, The Spoonful of Milk (La Cuillerée de lait), gouache on paper

Marc Chagall was born Moishe Shagal in a Jewish family in Liozna,[1] near the city of Vitebsk (Belarus, then part of the Russian Empire) in 1887.[b][11] At the time of his birth, Vitebsk's population was about 66,000. Half of the population were Jewish.[9] A picturesque city of churches and synagogues, it was called "Russian Toledo" by artist Ilya Repin, after the cosmopolitan city of the former Spanish Empire.[12] As the city was built mostly of wood, little of it survived years of occupation and destruction during World War II.

Chagall was the eldest of nine children. The family name, Shagal, is a variant of the name Segal, which in a Jewish community was usually borne by a Levitic family.[13] His father, Khatskl (Zachar) Shagal, was employed by a herring merchant, and his mother, Feige-Ite, sold groceries from their home. His father worked hard, carrying heavy barrels but earning only 20 roubles each month (the average wages across the Russian Empire was 13 roubles a month). Chagall would later include fish motifs "out of respect for his father", writes Chagall biographer, Jacob Baal-Teshuva.[citation needed] Chagall wrote of these early years:

Day after day, winter and summer, at six o'clock in the morning, my father got up and went off to the synagogue. There he said his usual prayer for some dead man or other. On his return he made ready the samovar, drank some tea and went to work. Hellish work, the work of a galley-slave. Why try to hide it? How tell about it? No word will ever ease my father's lot... There was always plenty of butter and cheese on our table. Buttered bread, like an eternal symbol, was never out of my childish hands.[14]

One of the main sources of income of the Jewish population of the town was from the manufacture of clothing that was sold throughout the Russian Empire. They also made furniture and various agricultural tools.[15] From the late 18th century to the First World War, the Imperial Russian government confined Jews to living within the Pale of Settlement, which included modern Ukraine, Belarus, Poland, Lithuania, and Latvia, almost exactly corresponding to the territory of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth recently taken over by Imperial Russia. This caused the creation of Jewish market-villages (shtetls) throughout today's Eastern Europe, with their own markets, schools, hospitals, and other community institutions.[16]: 14 

Chagall wrote as a boy; "I felt at every step that I was a Jew—people made me feel it".[17][18] During a pogrom, Chagall wrote that: "The street lamps are out. I feel panicky, especially in front of butchers' windows. There you can see calves that are still alive lying beside the butchers' hatchets and knives".[18][19] When asked by some pogromniks "Jew or not?", Chagall remembered thinking: "My pockets are empty, my fingers sensitive, my legs weak and they are out for blood. My death would be futile. I so wanted to live".[18][19] Chagall denied being a Jew, leading the pogromniks to shout "All right! Get along!"[18][19]

Most of what is known about Chagall's early life has come from his autobiography, My Life. In it, he described the major influence that the culture of Hasidic Judaism had on his life as an artist. Chagall related how he realised that the Jewish traditions in which he had grown up were fast disappearing and that he needed to document them. Vitebsk itself had been a centre of that culture dating from the 1730s with its teachings derived from the Kabbalah. Chagall scholar Susan Tumarkin Goodman describes the links and sources of his art to his early home:

Chagall's art can be understood as the response to a situation that has long marked the history of Russian Jews. Though they were cultural innovators who made important contributions to the broader society, Jews were considered outsiders in a frequently hostile society... Chagall himself was born of a family steeped in religious life; his parents were observant Hasidic Jews who found spiritual satisfaction in a life defined by their faith and organized by prayer.[16]: 14 

Art education

 
Portrait of Chagall by Yehuda Pen, his first art teacher in Vitebsk

In the Russian Empire at that time, Jewish children were not allowed to attend regular schools or universities. Their movement within the city was also restricted. Chagall therefore received his primary education at the local Jewish religious school, where he studied Hebrew and the Bible. At the age of 13, his mother tried to enroll him in a regular high school, and he recalled, "But in that school, they don't take Jews. Without a moment's hesitation, my courageous mother walks up to a professor." She offered the headmaster 50 roubles to let him attend, which he accepted.[14]

A turning point of his artistic life came when he first noticed a fellow student drawing. Baal-Teshuva writes that for the young Chagall, watching someone draw "was like a vision, a revelation in black and white". Chagall would later say that there was no art of any kind in his family's home and the concept was totally alien to him. When Chagall asked the schoolmate how he learned to draw, his friend replied, "Go and find a book in the library, idiot, choose any picture you like, and just copy it". He soon began copying images from books and found the experience so rewarding he then decided he wanted to become an artist.[15]

He eventually confided to his mother, "I want to be a painter", although she could not yet understand his sudden interest in art or why he would choose a vocation that "seemed so impractical", writes Goodman. The young Chagall explained, "There's a place in town; if I'm admitted and if I complete the course, I'll come out a regular artist. I'd be so happy!" It was 1906, and he had noticed the studio of Yehuda (Yuri) Pen, a realist artist who operated a drawing school in Vitebsk; at the same time, future artists El Lissitzky and Ossip Zadkine were also Pen's students. Due to Chagall's youth and lack of income, Pen offered to teach him free of charge. However, after a few months at the school, Chagall realized that academic portrait painting did not suit his desires.[15]

Artistic inspiration

 
Marc Chagall, 1912, Calvary (Golgotha), oil on canvas, 174.6 × 192.4 cm, Museum of Modern Art, New York. Alternative titles: Kreuzigung Bild 2 Christus gewidmet [Golgotha. Crucifixion. Dedicated to Christ]. Sold through Galerie Der Sturm (Herwarth Walden), Berlin to Bernhard Koehler (1849–1927), Berlin, 1913. Exhibited: Erster Deutscher Herbstsalon, Berlin, 1913

Goodman notes that during this period in Imperial Russia, Jews had two ways for joining the art world: one was to "hide or deny one's Jewish roots", the other—the one that Chagall chose—was "to cherish and publicly express one's Jewish roots" by integrating them into art. For Chagall, this was also his means of "self-assertion and an expression of principle."[16]: 14 

Chagall biographer Franz Meyer explains that with the connections between his art and early life "the hassidic spirit is still the basis and source of nourishment for his art."[20] Lewis adds, "As cosmopolitan an artist as he would later become, his storehouse of visual imagery would never expand beyond the landscape of his childhood, with its snowy streets, wooden houses, and ubiquitous fiddlers... [with] scenes of childhood so indelibly in one's mind and to invest them with an emotional charge so intense that it could only be discharged obliquely through an obsessive repetition of the same cryptic symbols and ideograms... "[9]

Years later, at the age of 57 while living in the United States, Chagall confirmed this when he published an open letter entitled, "To My City Vitebsk":

Why? Why did I leave you many years ago? ... You thought, the boy seeks something, seeks such a special subtlety, that color descending like stars from the sky and landing, bright and transparent, like snow on our roofs. Where did he get it? How would it come to a boy like him? I don't know why he couldn't find it with us, in the city—in his homeland. Maybe the boy is "crazy", but "crazy" for the sake of art. ...You thought: "I can see, I am etched in the boy's heart, but he is still 'flying,' he is still striving to take off, he has 'wind' in his head." ... I did not live with you, but I didn't have one single painting that didn't breathe with your spirit and reflection.[21]

Art career

Russian Empire (1906–1910)

In 1906, he moved to Saint Petersburg, which was then the capital of the Russian Empire and the center of the country's artistic life with its famous art schools. Since Jews were not permitted into the city without an internal passport, he managed to get a temporary passport from a friend. He enrolled in a prestigious art school and studied there for two years.[15] By 1907, he had begun painting naturalistic self-portraits and landscapes. Chagall was an active member of the irregular freemasonic lodge, the Grand Orient of Russia's Peoples.[22] He belonged to the "Vitebsk" lodge.

Between 1908 and 1910, Chagall was a student of Léon Bakst at the Zvantseva School of Drawing and Painting. While in Saint Petersburg, he discovered experimental theater and the work of such artists as Paul Gauguin.[23] Bakst, also Jewish, was a designer of decorative art and was famous as a draftsman designer of stage sets and costumes for the Ballets Russes, and helped Chagall by acting as a role model for Jewish success. Bakst moved to Paris a year later. Art historian Raymond Cogniat writes that after living and studying art on his own for four years, "Chagall entered into the mainstream of contemporary art. ...His apprenticeship over, Russia had played a memorable initial role in his life."[24]: 30 

Chagall stayed in Saint Petersburg until 1910, often visiting Vitebsk where he met Bella Rosenfeld. In My Life, Chagall described his first meeting her: "Her silence is mine, her eyes mine. It is as if she knows everything about my childhood, my present, my future, as if she can see right through me."[15]: 22  Bella later wrote, of meeting him, "When you did catch a glimpse of his eyes, they were as blue as if they'd fallen straight out of the sky. They were strange eyes … long, almond-shaped … and each seemed to sail along by itself, like a little boat."[25]

France (1910–1914)

 
Marc Chagall, 1911–12, The Drunkard (Le saoul), 1912, oil on canvas. 85 × 115 cm. Private collection
 
Marc Chagall, 1912, The Fiddler, an inspiration for the musical Fiddler on the Roof[26]

In 1910, Chagall relocated to Paris to develop his artistic style. Art historian and curator James Sweeney notes that when Chagall first arrived in Paris, Cubism was the dominant art form, and French art was still dominated by the "materialistic outlook of the 19th century". But Chagall arrived from Russia with "a ripe color gift, a fresh, unashamed response to sentiment, a feeling for simple poetry and a sense of humor", he adds. These notions were alien to Paris at that time, and as a result, his first recognition came not from other painters but from poets such as Blaise Cendrars and Guillaume Apollinaire.[27]: 7  Art historian Jean Leymarie observes that Chagall began thinking of art as "emerging from the internal being outward, from the seen object to the psychic outpouring", which was the reverse of the Cubist way of creating.[28]

He therefore developed friendships with Guillaume Apollinaire and other avant-garde artists including Robert Delaunay and Fernand Léger.[29] Baal-Teshuva writes that "Chagall's dream of Paris, the city of light and above all, of freedom, had come true."[15]: 33  His first days were a hardship for the 23-year-old Chagall, who was lonely in the big city and unable to speak French. Some days he "felt like fleeing back to Russia, as he daydreamed while he painted, about the riches of Slavic folklore, his Hasidic experiences, his family, and especially Bella".

In Paris, he enrolled at Académie de La Palette, an avant-garde school of art where the painters Jean Metzinger, André Dunoyer de Segonzac and Henri Le Fauconnier taught, and also found work at another academy. He would spend his free hours visiting galleries and salons, especially the Louvre; artists he came to admire included Rembrandt, the Le Nain brothers, Chardin, van Gogh, Renoir, Pissarro, Matisse, Gauguin, Courbet, Millet, Manet, Monet, Delacroix, and others. It was in Paris that he learned the technique of gouache, which he used to paint Belarusian scenes. He also visited Montmartre and the Latin Quarter "and was happy just breathing Parisian air."[15] Baal-Teshuva describes this new phase in Chagall's artistic development:

Chagall was exhilarated, intoxicated, as he strolled through the streets and along the banks of the Seine. Everything about the French capital excited him: the shops, the smell of fresh bread in the morning, the markets with their fresh fruit and vegetables, the wide boulevards, the cafés and restaurants, and above all the Eiffel Tower. Another completely new world that opened up for him was the kaleidoscope of colors and forms in the works of French artists. Chagall enthusiastically reviewed their many different tendencies, having to rethink his position as an artist and decide what creative avenue he wanted to pursue.[15]: 33 

 
Marc Chagall, 1912, Le Marchand de bestiaux (The Drover, The Cattle Dealer), oil on canvas, 97.1 x 202.5 cm, Kunstmuseum Basel

During his time in Paris, Chagall was constantly reminded of his home in Vitebsk, as Paris was also home to many painters, writers, poets, composers, dancers, and other émigrés from the Russian Empire. However, "night after night he painted until dawn", only then going to bed for a few hours, and resisted the many temptations of the big city at night.[15]: 44  "My homeland exists only in my soul", he once said.[28]: viii  He continued painting Jewish motifs and subjects from his memories of Vitebsk, although he included Parisian scenes—- the Eiffel Tower in particular, along with portraits. Many of his works were updated versions of paintings he had made in Russia, transposed into Fauvist or Cubist keys.[9]

 
Marc Chagall, 1912, Still-life (Nature morte), oil on canvas, private collection

Chagall developed a whole repertoire of quirky motifs: ghostly figures floating in the sky, ... the gigantic fiddler dancing on miniature dollhouses, the livestock and transparent wombs and, within them, tiny offspring sleeping upside down.[9] The majority of his scenes of life in Vitebsk were painted while living in Paris, and "in a sense they were dreams", notes Lewis. Their "undertone of yearning and loss", with a detached and abstract appearance, caused Apollinaire to be "struck by this quality", calling them "surnaturel!" His "animal/human hybrids and airborne phantoms" would later become a formative influence on Surrealism.[9] Chagall, however, did not want his work to be associated with any school or movement and considered his own personal language of symbols to be meaningful to himself. But Sweeney notes that others often still associate his work with "illogical and fantastic painting", especially when he uses "curious representational juxtapositions".[27]: 10 

Sweeney writes that "This is Chagall's contribution to contemporary art: the reawakening of a poetry of representation, avoiding factual illustration on the one hand, and non-figurative abstractions on the other". André Breton said that "with him alone, the metaphor made its triumphant return to modern painting".[27]: 7 

Russia (1914–1922)

Because he missed his fiancée, Bella, who was still in Vitebsk—"He thought about her day and night", writes Baal-Teshuva—and was afraid of losing her, Chagall decided to accept an invitation from a noted art dealer in Berlin to exhibit his work, his intention being to continue on to Belarus, marry Bella, and then return with her to Paris. Chagall took 40 canvases and 160 gouaches, watercolors and drawings to be exhibited. The exhibit, held at Herwarth Walden's Sturm Gallery was a huge success, "The German critics positively sang his praises."[15]

 
People's Art School where the Vitebsk Museum of Modern Art was situated

After the exhibit, he continued on to Vitebsk, where he planned to stay only long enough to marry Bella. However, after a few weeks, the First World War began, closing the Russian border for an indefinite period. A year later he married Bella Rosenfeld and they had their first child, Ida. Before the marriage, Chagall had difficulty convincing Bella's parents that he would be a suitable husband for their daughter. They were worried about her marrying a painter from a poor family and wondered how he would support her. Becoming a successful artist now became a goal and inspiration. According to Lewis, "[T]he euphoric paintings of this time, which show the young couple floating balloon-like over Vitebsk—its wooden buildings faceted in the Delaunay manner—are the most lighthearted of his career".[9] His wedding pictures were also a subject he would return to in later years as he thought about this period of his life.[15]: 75 

In 1915, Chagall began exhibiting his work in Moscow, first exhibiting his works at a well-known salon and in 1916 exhibiting pictures in St. Petersburg. He again showed his art at a Moscow exhibition of avant-garde artists. This exposure brought recognition, and a number of wealthy collectors began buying his art. He also began illustrating a number of Yiddish books with ink drawings. He illustrated I. L. Peretz's The Magician in 1917.[30] Chagall was 30 years old and had begun to become well known.[15]: 77 

The October Revolution of 1917 was a dangerous time for Chagall although it also offered opportunity. Chagall wrote he came to fear Bolshevik orders pinned on fences, writing: "The factories were stopping. The horizons opened. Space and emptiness. No more bread. The black lettering on the morning posters made me feel sick at heart".[31] Chagall was often hungry for days, later remembering watching "a bride, the beggars and the poor wretches weighted down with bundles", leading him to conclude that the new regime had turned the Russian Empire "upside down the way I turn my pictures".[31] By then he was one of Imperial Russia's most distinguished artists and a member of the modernist avant-garde, which enjoyed special privileges and prestige as the "aesthetic arm of the revolution".[9] He was offered a notable position as a commissar of visual arts for the country,[clarification needed] but preferred something less political, and instead accepted a job as commissar of arts for Vitebsk. This resulted in his founding the Vitebsk Arts College which, adds Lewis, became the "most distinguished school of art in the Soviet Union".

It obtained for its faculty some of the most important artists in the country, such as El Lissitzky and Kazimir Malevich. He also added his first teacher, Yehuda Pen. Chagall tried to create an atmosphere of a collective of independently minded artists, each with their own unique style. However, this would soon prove to be difficult as a few of the key faculty members preferred a Suprematist art of squares and circles, and disapproved of Chagall's attempt at creating "bourgeois individualism". Chagall then resigned as commissar and moved to Moscow.

In Moscow he was offered a job as stage designer for the newly formed State Jewish Chamber Theater.[32] It was set to begin operation in early 1921 with a number of plays by Sholem Aleichem. For its opening he created a number of large background murals using techniques he learned from Bakst, his early teacher. One of the main murals was 9 feet (2.7 m) tall by 24 feet (7.3 m) long and included images of various lively subjects such as dancers, fiddlers, acrobats, and farm animals. One critic at the time called it "Hebrew jazz in paint". Chagall created it as a "storehouse of symbols and devices", notes Lewis.[9] The murals "constituted a landmark" in the history of the theatre, and were forerunners of his later large-scale works, including murals for the New York Metropolitan Opera and the Paris Opera.[15]: 87 

The First World War ended in 1918, but the Russian Civil War continued, and famine spread. The Chagalls found it necessary to move to a smaller, less expensive, town near Moscow, although Chagall now had to commute to Moscow daily, using crowded trains. In 1921, he worked as an art teacher along with his friend sculptor Isaac Itkind in a Jewish boys' shelter in suburban Malakhovka, which housed young refugees orphaned by pogroms.[10]: 270  While there, he created a series of illustrations for the Yiddish poetry cycle Grief written by David Hofstein, who was another teacher at the Malakhovka shelter.[10]: 273 

After spending the years between 1921 and 1922 living in primitive conditions, he decided to go back to France so that he could develop his art in a more comfortable country. Numerous other artists, writers, and musicians were also planning to relocate to the West. He applied for an exit visa and while waiting for its uncertain approval, wrote his autobiography, My Life.[15]: 121 

France (1923–1941)

In 1923, Chagall left Moscow to return to France. On his way he stopped in Berlin to recover the many pictures he had left there on exhibit ten years earlier, before the war began, but was unable to find or recover any of them. Nonetheless, after returning to Paris he again "rediscovered the free expansion and fulfillment which were so essential to him", writes Lewis. With all his early works now lost, he began trying to paint from his memories of his earliest years in Vitebsk with sketches and oil paintings.[9]

He formed a business relationship with French art dealer Ambroise Vollard. This inspired him to begin creating etchings for a series of illustrated books, including Gogol's Dead Souls, the Bible, and the La Fontaine's Fables. These illustrations would eventually come to represent his finest printmaking efforts.[9] In 1924, he travelled to Brittany and painted La fenêtre sur l'Île-de-Bréhat.[33] By 1926 he had his first exhibition in the United States at the Reinhardt gallery of New York which included about 100 works, although he did not travel to the opening. He instead stayed in France, "painting ceaselessly", notes Baal-Teshuva.[15] It was not until 1927 that Chagall made his name in the French art world, when art critic and historian Maurice Raynal awarded him a place in his book Modern French Painters. However, Raynal was still at a loss to accurately describe Chagall to his readers:

Chagall interrogates life in the light of a refined, anxious, childlike sensibility, a slightly romantic temperament ... a blend of sadness and gaiety characteristic of a grave view of life. His imagination, his temperament, no doubt forbid a Latin severity of composition.[10]: 314 

During this period he traveled throughout France and the Côte d'Azur, where he enjoyed the landscapes, colorful vegetation, the blue Mediterranean Sea, and the mild weather. He made repeated trips to the countryside, taking his sketchbook.[10]: 9  He also visited nearby countries and later wrote about the impressions some of those travels left on him:

I should like to recall how advantageous my travels outside France have been for me in an artistic sense—in Holland or in Spain, Italy, Egypt, Palestine, or simply in the south of France. There, in the south, for the first time in my life, I saw that rich greenness—the like of which I had never seen in my own country. In Holland I thought I discovered that familiar and throbbing light, like the light between the late afternoon and dusk. In Italy I found that peace of the museums which the sunlight brought to life. In Spain I was happy to find the inspiration of a mystical, if sometimes cruel, past, to find the song of its sky and of its people. And in the East [Palestine] I found unexpectedly the Bible and a part of my very being.[21]: 77 

The Bible illustrations

 
The Prophet Jeremiah (1968)

After returning to Paris from one of his trips, Vollard commissioned Chagall to illustrate the Old Testament. Although he could have completed the project in France, he used the assignment as an excuse to travel to Israel to experience for himself the Holy Land. In 1931 Marc Chagall and his family traveled to Tel Aviv on the invitation of Meir Dizengoff. Dizengoff had previously encouraged Chagall to visit Tel Aviv in connection with Dizengoff's plan to build a Jewish Art Museum in the new city. Chagall and his family were invited to stay at Dizengoff's house in Tel Aviv, which later became Independence Hall of the State of Israel.

Chagall ended up staying in the Holy Land for two months. Chagall felt at home in Israel where many people spoke Yiddish and Russian. According to Jacob Baal-Teshuva, "he was impressed by the pioneering spirit of the people in the kibbutzim and deeply moved by the Wailing Wall and the other holy places".[15]: 133 

Chagall later told a friend that Israel gave him "the most vivid impression he had ever received". Wullschlager notes, however, that whereas Delacroix and Matisse had found inspiration in the exoticism of North Africa, he as a Jew in Israel had different perspective. "What he was really searching for there was not external stimulus but an inner authorization from the land of his ancestors, to plunge into his work on the Bible illustrations".[10]: 343  Chagall stated that "In the East I found the Bible and part of my own being."

As a result, he immersed himself in "the history of the Jews, their trials, prophecies, and disasters", notes Wullschlager. She adds that beginning the assignment was an "extraordinary risk" for Chagall, as he had finally become well known as a leading contemporary painter, but would now end his modernist themes and delve into "an ancient past".[10]: 350  Between 1931 and 1934 he worked "obsessively" on "The Bible", even going to Amsterdam in order to carefully study the biblical paintings of Rembrandt and El Greco, to see the extremes of religious painting. He walked the streets of the city's Jewish quarter to again feel the earlier atmosphere. He told Franz Meyer:

I did not see the Bible, I dreamed it. Ever since early childhood, I have been captivated by the Bible. It has always seemed to me and still seems today the greatest source of poetry of all time.[10]: 350 

Chagall saw the Old Testament as a "human story, ... not with the creation of the cosmos but with the creation of man, and his figures of angels are rhymed or combined with human ones", writes Wullschlager. She points out that in one of his early Bible images, "Abraham and the Three Angels", the angels sit and chat over a glass of wine "as if they have just dropped by for dinner".[10]: 350 

He returned to France and by the next year had completed 32 out of the total of 105 plates. By 1939, at the beginning of World War II, he had finished 66. However, Vollard died that same year. When the series was completed in 1956, it was published by Edition Tériade. Baal-Teshuva writes that "the illustrations were stunning and met with great acclaim. Once again Chagall had shown himself to be one of the 20th century's most important graphic artists".[15]: 135  Leymarie has described these drawings by Chagall as "monumental" and,

...full of divine inspiration, which retrace the legendary destiny and the epic history of Israel to Genesis to the Prophets, through the Patriarchs and the Heroes. Each picture becomes one with the event, informing the text with a solemn intimacy unknown since Rembrandt.[28]: ix 

Nazi campaigns against modern art

Not long after Chagall began his work on the Bible, Adolf Hitler gained power in Germany. Anti-Semitic laws were being introduced and the first concentration camp at Dachau had been established. Wullschlager describes the early effects on art:

The Nazis had begun their campaign against modernist art as soon as they seized power. Expressionist, cubist, abstract, and surrealist art—anything intellectual, Jewish, foreign, socialist-inspired, or difficult to understand—was targeted, from Picasso and Matisse going back to Cézanne and van Gogh; in its place traditional German realism, accessible and open to patriotic interpretation, was extolled.[10]: 374 

Beginning during 1937 about twenty thousand works from German museums were confiscated as "degenerate" by a committee directed by Joseph Goebbels.[10]: 375  Although the German press had once "swooned over him", the new German authorities now made a mockery of Chagall's art, describing them as "green, purple, and red Jews shooting out of the earth, fiddling on violins, flying through the air ... representing [an] assault on Western civilization".[10]: 376 

After Germany invaded and occupied France, the Chagalls remained in Vichy France, unaware that French Jews, with the help of the Vichy government, were being collected and sent to German concentration camps, from which few would return. The Vichy collaborationist government, directed by Marshal Philippe Pétain, immediately upon assuming power established a commission to "redefine French citizenship" with the aim of stripping "undesirables", including naturalized citizens, of their French nationality. Chagall had been so involved with his art, that it was not until October 1940, after the Vichy government, at the behest of the Nazi occupying forces, began approving anti-Semitic laws, that he began to understand what was happening. Learning that Jews were being removed from public and academic positions, the Chagalls finally "woke up to the danger they faced". But Wullschlager notes that "by then they were trapped".[10]: 382  Their only refuge could be America, but "they could not afford the passage to New York" or the large bond that each immigrant had to provide upon entry to ensure that they would not become a financial burden to the country.

Escaping occupied France

According to Wullschlager, "[T]he speed with which France collapsed astonished everyone: the [British supported French army] capitulated even more quickly than Poland had done" a year earlier. Shock waves crossed the Atlantic... as Paris had until then been equated with civilization throughout the non-Nazi world."[10]: 388  Yet the attachment of the Chagalls to France "blinded them to the urgency of the situation."[10]: 389  Many other well-known Russian and Jewish artists eventually sought to escape: these included Chaïm Soutine, Max Ernst, Max Beckmann, Ludwig Fulda, author Victor Serge and prize-winning author Vladimir Nabokov, who although not Jewish himself, was married to a Jewish woman.[34]: 1181  Russian author Victor Serge described many of the people living temporarily in Marseille who were waiting to emigrate to America:

Here is a beggar's alley gathering the remnants of revolutions, democracies and crushed intellects... In our ranks are enough doctors, psychologists, engineers, educationalists, poets, painters, writers, musicians, economists and public men to vitalize a whole great country.[10]: 392 

After prodding by their daughter Ida, who "perceived the need to act fast",[10]: 388  and with help from Alfred Barr of the New York Museum of Modern Art, Chagall was saved by having his name added to the list of prominent artists whose lives were at risk and who the United States should try to extricate. Varian Fry, the American journalist, and Hiram Bingham IV, the American Vice-Consul in Marseilles, ran a rescue operation to smuggle artists and intellectuals out of Europe to the US by providing them with forged visas to the US. In April 1941, Chagall and his wife were stripped of their French citizenship. The Chagalls stayed in a hotel in Marseille where they were arrested along with other Jews. Varian Fry managed to pressure the French police to release him, threatening them of scandal.[35] Chagall was one of over 2,000 who were rescued by this operation. He left France in May 1941, "when it was almost too late", adds Lewis. Picasso and Matisse were also invited to come to America but they decided to remain in France. Chagall and Bella arrived in New York on 23 June 1941, the day after Germany invaded the Soviet Union.[15]: 150  Ida and her husband Michel followed on the notorious refugee ship SS Navemar with a large case of Chagall's work.[36] A chance post-war meeting in a French café between Ida and intelligence analyst Konrad Kellen led to Kellen carrying more paintings on his return to the United States.[37]

United States (1941–1948)

 
Photo portrait of Chagall in 1941 by Carl Van Vechten

Even before arriving in the United States in 1941, Chagall was awarded the Carnegie Prize third prize in 1939 for "Les Fiancés". After being in America he discovered that he had already achieved "international stature", writes Cogniat, although he felt ill-suited in this new role in a foreign country whose language he could not yet speak. He became a celebrity mostly against his will, feeling lost in the strange surroundings.[24]: 57 

After a while he began to settle in New York, which was full of writers, painters, and composers who, like himself, had fled from Europe during the Nazi invasions. He lived at 4 East 74th Street.[38] He spent time visiting galleries and museums, and befriended other artists including Piet Mondrian and André Breton.[15]: 155 

Baal-Teshuva writes that Chagall "loved" going to the sections of New York where Jews lived, especially the Lower East Side. There he felt at home, enjoying the Jewish foods and being able to read the Yiddish press, which became his main source of information since he did not yet speak English.[15]

Contemporary artists did not yet understand or even like Chagall's art. According to Baal-Teshuva, "they had little in common with a folkloristic storyteller of Russo-Jewish extraction with a propensity for mysticism." The Paris School, which was referred to as 'Parisian Surrealism,' meant little to them.[15]: 155  Those attitudes would begin to change, however, when Pierre Matisse, the son of recognized French artist Henri Matisse, became his representative and managed Chagall exhibitions in New York and Chicago in 1941. One of the earliest exhibitions included 21 of his masterpieces from 1910 to 1941.[15] Art critic Henry McBride wrote about this exhibit for the New York Sun:

Chagall is about as gypsy as they come... these pictures do more for his reputation than anything we have previously seen... His colors sparkle with poetry... his work is authentically Russian as a Volga boatman's song...[39]

Aleko ballet (1942)

He was offered a commission by choreographer Léonide Massine of the Ballet Theatre of New York to design the sets and costumes for his new ballet, Aleko. This ballet would stage the words of Alexander Pushkin's verse narrative The Gypsies with the music of Tchaikovsky. The ballet was originally planned for a New York debut, but as a cost-saving measure it was moved to Mexico where labor costs were cheaper than in New York. While Chagall had done stage settings before while in Russia, this was his first ballet, and it would give him the opportunity to visit Mexico. While there he quickly began to appreciate the "primitive ways and colorful art of the Mexicans," notes Cogniat. He found "something very closely related to his own nature", and did all the color detail for the sets while there.[24] Eventually, he created four large backdrops and had Mexican seamstresses sew the ballet costumes.

When the ballet premiered at the Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City on 8 September 1942 it was considered a "remarkable success."[15] In the audience were other famous mural painters who came to see Chagall's work, including Diego Rivera and José Clemente Orozco. According to Baal-Teshuva, when the final bar of music ended, "there was a tumultuous applause and 19 curtain calls, with Chagall himself being called back onto the stage again and again." The production then moved to New York, where it was presented four weeks later at the Metropolitan Opera and the response was repeated, "again Chagall was the hero of the evening".[15]: 158  Art critic Edwin Denby wrote of the opening for the New York Herald Tribune that Chagall's work:

has turned into a dramatized exhibition of giant paintings... It surpasses anything Chagall has done on the easel scale, and it is a breathtaking experience, of a kind one hardly expects in the theatre.[40]

Coming to grips with World War II

After Chagall returned to New York in 1943 current events began to interest him more, and this was represented by his art, where he painted subjects including the Crucifixion and scenes of war. He learned that the Germans had destroyed the town where he was raised, Vitebsk, and became greatly distressed.[15]: 159  He also learned about the Nazi concentration camps.[15] During a speech in February 1944, he described some of his feelings:

Meanwhile, the enemy jokes, saying that we are a "stupid nation." He thought that when he started slaughtering the Jews, we would all in our grief suddenly raise the greatest prophetic scream, and would be joined by the Christian humanists. But, after two thousand years of "Christianity" in the world—say whatever you like—but, with few exceptions, their hearts are silent... I see the artists in Christian nations sit still—who has heard them speak up? They are not worried about themselves, and our Jewish life doesn't concern them.[21]: 89 

In the same speech he credited Soviet Russia with doing the most to save the Jews:

The Jews will always be grateful to it. What other great country has saved a million and a half Jews from Hitler's hands, and shared its last piece of bread? What country abolished antisemitism? What other country devoted at least a piece of land as an autonomous region for Jews who want to live there? All this, and more, weighs heavily on the scales of history.[21]: 89 

On 2 September 1944, Bella died suddenly due to a virus infection, which was not treated due to the wartime shortage of medicine. As a result, he stopped all work for many months, and when he did resume painting his first pictures were concerned with preserving Bella's memory.[24] Wullschlager writes of the effect on Chagall: "As news poured in through 1945 of the ongoing Holocaust at Nazi concentration camps, Bella took her place in Chagall's mind with the millions of Jewish victims." He even considered the possibility that their "exile from Europe had sapped her will to live."[10]: 419 

 
With Virginia Haggard McNeil

After a year of living with his daughter Ida and her husband Michel Gordey, he entered into a romance with Virginia Haggard, daughter of diplomat Sir Godfrey Digby Napier Haggard and great-niece of the author Sir Henry Rider Haggard; their relationship endured seven years. They had a child together, David McNeil, born 22 June 1946.[15] Haggard recalled her "seven years of plenty" with Chagall in her book, My Life with Chagall (Robert Hale, 1986).

A few months after the Allies succeeded in liberating Paris from Nazi occupation, with the help of the Allied armies, Chagall published a letter in a Paris weekly, "To the Paris Artists":

In recent years I have felt unhappy that I couldn't be with you, my friends. My enemy forced me to take the road of exile. On that tragic road, I lost my wife, the companion of my life, the woman who was my inspiration. I want to say to my friends in France that she joins me in this greeting, she who loved France and French art so faithfully. Her last joy was the liberation of Paris... Now, when Paris is liberated, when the art of France is resurrected, the whole world too will, once and for all, be free of the satanic enemies who wanted to annihilate not just the body but also the soul—the soul, without which there is no life, no artistic creativity.[21]: 101 

Post-war years

By 1946, his artwork was becoming more widely recognized. The Museum of Modern Art in New York had a large exhibition representing 40 years of his work which gave visitors one of the first complete impressions of the changing nature of his art over the years. The war had ended and he began making plans to return to Paris. According to Cogniat, "He found he was even more deeply attached than before, not only to the atmosphere of Paris, but to the city itself, to its houses and its views."[24] Chagall summed up his years living in America:

I lived here in America during the inhuman war in which humanity deserted itself... I have seen the rhythm of life. I have seen America fighting with Allies... the wealth that she has distributed to bring relief to the people who had to suffer the consequences of the war... I like America and the Americans... people there are frank. It is a young country with the qualities and faults of youth. It is a delight to love people like that... Above all I am impressed by the greatness of this country and the freedom that it gives.[15]: 170 

He went back for good during the autumn of 1947, where he attended the opening of the exhibition of his works at the Musée National d'Art Moderne.[24]

France (1948–1985)

After returning to France he traveled throughout Europe and chose to live in the Côte d'Azur which by that time had become somewhat of an "artistic centre". Matisse lived near Saint-Paul-de-Vence, about seven miles west of Nice, while Picasso lived in Vallauris. Although they lived nearby and sometimes worked together, there was artistic rivalry between them as their work was so distinctly different, and they never became long-term friends. According to Picasso's mistress, Françoise Gilot, Picasso still had a great deal of respect for Chagall, and once told her,

When Matisse dies, Chagall will be the only painter left who understands what color is... His canvases are really painted, not just tossed together. Some of the last things he's done in Vence convince me that there's never been anybody since Renoir who has the feeling for light that Chagall has."[41]

In April 1952, Virginia Haggard left Chagall for the photographer Charles Leirens; she went on to become a professional photographer herself.

 
Vava Brodsky and Marc Chagall in 1967

Chagall's daughter Ida married art historian Franz Meyer in January 1952, and feeling that her father missed the companionship of a woman in his home, introduced him to Valentina (Vava) Brodsky, a woman from a similar Russian Jewish background, who had run a successful millinery business in London. She became his secretary, and after a few months agreed to stay only if Chagall married her. The marriage took place in July 1952[15]: 183 —though six years later, when there was conflict between Ida and Vava, "Marc and Vava divorced and immediately remarried under an agreement more favourable to Vava" (Jean-Paul Crespelle, author of Chagall, l'Amour le Reve et la Vie, quoted in Haggard: My Life with Chagall).

In 1954, he was engaged as set decorator for Robert Helpmann's production of Rimsky-Korsakov's opera Le Coq d'Or at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, but he withdrew. The Australian designer Loudon Sainthill was drafted at short notice in his place.[42]

In the years ahead he was able to produce not just paintings and graphic art, but also numerous sculptures and ceramics, including wall tiles, painted vases, plates and jugs. He also began working in larger-scale formats, producing large murals, stained glass windows, mosaics and tapestries.[15]

Ceiling of the Paris Opera (1963)

In 1963, Chagall was commissioned to paint the new ceiling for the Paris Opera (Palais Garnier), a majestic 19th-century building and national monument. André Malraux, France's Minister of Culture wanted something unique and decided Chagall would be the ideal artist. However, this choice of artist caused controversy: some objected to having a Russian Jew decorate a French national monument; others disliked the ceiling of the historic building being painted by a modern artist. Some magazines wrote condescending articles about Chagall and Malraux, about which Chagall commented to one writer:

They really had it in for me... It is amazing the way the French resent foreigners. You live here most of your life. You become a naturalized French citizen... work for nothing decorating their cathedrals, and still they despise you. You are not one of them.[15]: 196 

Nonetheless, Chagall continued the project, which took the 77-year-old artist a year to complete. The final canvas was nearly 2,400 square feet (220 sq. meters) and required 440 pounds (200 kg) of paint. It had five sections which were glued to polyester panels and hoisted up to the 70-foot (21 m) ceiling. The images Chagall painted on the canvas paid tribute to the composers Mozart, Wagner, Mussorgsky, Berlioz and Ravel, as well as to famous actors and dancers.[15]: 199 

It was presented to the public on 23 September 1964 in the presence of Malraux and 2,100 invited guests. The Paris correspondent for the New York Times wrote, "For once the best seats were in the uppermost circle:[15]: 199  Baal-Teshuva writes:

To begin with, the big crystal chandelier hanging from the centre of the ceiling was unlit... the entire corps de ballet came onto the stage, after which, in Chagall's honour, the opera's orchestra played the finale of the "Jupiter Symphony" by Mozart, Chagall's favorite composer. During the last bars of the music, the chandelier lit up, bringing the artist's ceiling painting to life in all its glory, drawing rapturous applause from the audience.[15]: 199 

After the new ceiling was unveiled, "even the bitterest opponents of the commission seemed to fall silent", writes Baal-Teshuva. "Unanimously, the press declared Chagall's new work to be a great contribution to French culture." Malraux later said, "What other living artist could have painted the ceiling of the Paris Opera in the way Chagall did?... He is above all one of the great colourists of our time... many of his canvases and the Opera ceiling represent sublime images that rank among the finest poetry of our time, just as Titian produced the finest poetry of his day."[15]: 199  In Chagall's speech to the audience he explained the meaning of the work:

Up there in my painting I wanted to reflect, like a mirror in a bouquet, the dreams and creations of the singers and musicians, to recall the movement of the colourfully attired audience below, and to honour the great opera and ballet composers... Now I offer this work as a gift of gratitude to France and her École de Paris, without which there would be no colour and no freedom.[21]: 151 

Art styles and techniques

Color

 
Bestiaire et Musique (1969)

According to Cogniat, in all Chagall's work during all stages of his life, it was his colors which attracted and captured the viewer's attention. During his earlier years his range was limited by his emphasis on form and his pictures never gave the impression of painted drawings. He adds, "The colors are a living, integral part of the picture and are never passively flat, or banal like an afterthought. They sculpt and animate the volume of the shapes... they indulge in flights of fancy and invention which add new perspectives and graduated, blended tones... His colors do not even attempt to imitate nature but rather to suggest movements, planes and rhythms."[24]

He was able to convey striking images using only two or three colors. Cogniat writes, "Chagall is unrivalled in this ability to give a vivid impression of explosive movement with the simplest use of colors..." Throughout his life his colors created a "vibrant atmosphere" which was based on "his own personal vision."[24]: 60 

Subject matter

From life memories to fantasy

Chagall's early life left him with a "powerful visual memory and a pictorial intelligence", writes Goodman. After living in France and experiencing the atmosphere of artistic freedom, his "vision soared and he created a new reality, one that drew on both his inner and outer worlds." But it was the images and memories of his early years in Belarus that would sustain his art for more than 70 years.[16]: 13 

 
The Circus Horse

According to Cogniat, there are certain elements in his art that have remained permanent and seen throughout his career. One of those was his choice of subjects and the way they were portrayed. "The most obviously constant element is his gift for happiness and his instinctive compassion, which even in the most serious subjects prevents him from dramatization..."[24]: 89  Musicians have been a constant during all stages of his work. After he first got married, "lovers have sought each other, embraced, caressed, floated through the air, met in wreaths of flowers, stretched, and swooped like the melodious passage of their vivid day-dreams. Acrobats contort themselves with the grace of exotic flowers on the end of their stems; flowers and foliage abound everywhere."[24] Wullschlager explains the sources for these images:

For him, clowns and acrobats always resembled figures in religious paintings... The evolution of the circus works... reflects a gradual clouding of his worldview, and the circus performers now gave way to the prophet or sage in his work—a figure into whom Chagall poured his anxiety as Europe darkened, and he could no longer rely on the lumiére-liberté of France for inspiration.[10]: 337 

Chagall described his love of circus people:

Why am I so touched by their makeup and grimaces? With them I can move toward new horizons... Chaplin seeks to do in film what I am trying to do in my paintings. He is perhaps the only artist today I could get along with without having to say a single word.[10]: 337 

His early pictures were often of the town where he was born and raised, Vitebsk. Cogniat notes that they are realistic and give the impression of firsthand experience by capturing a moment in time with action, often with a dramatic image. During his later years, as for instance in the "Bible series", subjects were more dramatic. He managed to blend the real with the fantastic, and combined with his use of color the pictures were always at least acceptable if not powerful. He never attempted to present pure reality but always created his atmospheres through fantasy.[24]: 91  In all cases Chagall's "most persistent subject is life itself, in its simplicity or its hidden complexity... He presents for our study places, people, and objects from his own life".

Jewish themes

After absorbing the techniques of Fauvism and Cubism (under the influence of Jean Metzinger and Albert Gleizes)[43] Chagall was able to blend these stylistic tendencies with his own folkish style. He gave the grim life of Hasidic Jews the "romantic overtones of a charmed world", notes Goodman. It was by combining the aspects of Modernism with his "unique artistic language", that he was able to catch the attention of critics and collectors throughout Europe. Generally, it was his boyhood of living in a Belarusian provincial town that gave him a continual source of imaginative stimuli. Chagall would become one of many Jewish émigrés who later became noted artists, all of them similarly having once been part of "Russia's most numerous and creative minorities", notes Goodman.[16]: 13 

World War I, which ended in 1918, had displaced nearly a million Jews and destroyed what remained of the provincial shtetl culture that had defined life for most Eastern European Jews for centuries. Goodman notes, "The fading of traditional Jewish society left artists like Chagall with powerful memories that could no longer be fed by a tangible reality. Instead, that culture became an emotional and intellectual source that existed solely in memory and the imagination... So rich had the experience been, it sustained him for the rest of his life."[16]: 15  Sweeney adds that "if you ask Chagall to explain his paintings, he would reply, 'I don't understand them at all. They are not literature. They are only pictorial arrangements of images that obsess me..."[27]: 7 

In 1948, after returning to France from the U.S. after the war, he saw for himself the destruction that the war had brought to Europe and the Jewish populations. In 1951, as part of a memorial book dedicated to eighty-four Jewish artists who were killed by the Nazis in France, he wrote a poem entitled "For the Slaughtered Artists: 1950", which inspired paintings such as the Song of David (see photo):

I see the fire, the smoke and the gas; rising to the blue cloud, turning it black. I see the torn-out hair, the pulled-out teeth. They overwhelm me with my rabid palette. I stand in the desert before heaps of boots, clothing, ash and dung, and mumble my Kaddish. And as I stand—from my paintings, the painted David descends to me, harp in hand. He wants to help me weep and recite chapters of Psalms.[21]: 114–115 

Lewis writes that Chagall "remains the most important visual artist to have borne witness to the world of East European Jewry... and inadvertently became the public witness of a now vanished civilization."[9] Although Judaism has religious inhibitions about pictorial art of many religious subjects, Chagall managed to use his fantasy images as a form of visual metaphor combined with folk imagery. His "Fiddler on the Roof", for example, combines a folksy village setting with a fiddler as a way to show the Jewish love of music as important to the Jewish spirit.

Music played an important role in shaping the subjects of his work. While he later came to love the music of Bach and Mozart, during his youth he was mostly influenced by the music within the Hasidic community where he was raised.[44] Art historian Franz Meyer points out that one of the main reasons for the unconventional nature of his work is related to the hassidism which inspired the world of his childhood and youth and had actually impressed itself on most Eastern European Jews since the 18th century. He writes, "For Chagall this is one of the deepest sources, not of inspiration, but of a certain spiritual attitude... the hassidic spirit is still the basis and source of nourishment of his art."[24]: 24  In a talk that Chagall gave in 1963 while visiting America, he discussed some of those impressions.

However, Chagall had a complex relationship with Judaism. On the one hand, he credited his Russian Jewish cultural background as being crucial to his artistic imagination. But however ambivalent he was about his religion, he could not avoid drawing upon his Jewish past for artistic material. As an adult, he was not a practicing Jew, but through his paintings and stained glass, he continually tried to suggest a more "universal message", using both Jewish and Christian themes.[45]

For about two thousand years a reserve of energy has fed and supported us, and filled our lives, but during the last century a split has opened in this reserve, and its components have begun to disintegrate: God, perspective, colour, the Bible, shape, line, traditions, the so-called humanities, love, devotion, family, school, education, the prophets and Christ himself. Have I too, perhaps, doubted in my time? I painted pictures upside down, decapitated people and dissected them, scattering the pieces in the air, all in the name of another perspective, another kind of picture composition and another formalism.[24]: 29 

He was also at pains to distance his work from a single Jewish focus. At the opening of The Chagall Museum in Nice he said 'My painting represents not the dream of one people but of all humanity'.

Other types of art

Stained glass windows

One of Chagall's major contributions to art has been his work with stained glass. This medium allowed him further to express his desire to create intense and fresh colors and had the added benefit of natural light and refraction interacting and constantly changing: everything from the position where the viewer stood to the weather outside would alter the visual effect (though this is not the case with his Hadassah windows). It was not until 1956, when he was nearly 70 years of age, that he designed windows for the church at Assy, his first major project. Then, from 1958 to 1960, he created windows for Metz Cathedral.

Jerusalem Windows (1962)

In 1960, he began creating stained glass windows for the synagogue of Hebrew University's Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem. Leymarie writes that "in order to illuminate the synagogue both spiritually and physically", it was decided that the twelve windows, representing the twelve tribes of Israel, were to be filled with stained glass. Chagall envisaged the synagogue as "a crown offered to the Jewish Queen", and the windows as "jewels of translucent fire", she writes. Chagall then devoted the next two years to the task, and upon completion in 1961 the windows were exhibited in Paris and then the Museum of Modern Art in New York. They were installed permanently in Jerusalem in February 1962. Each of the twelve windows is approximately 11 feet high and 8 feet (2.4 m) wide, much larger than anything he had done before. Cogniat considers them to be "his greatest work in the field of stained glass", although Virginia Haggard McNeil records Chagall's disappointment that they were to be lit with artificial light, and so would not change according to the conditions of natural light.

 
Peace, 1964, a stained glass memorial at the United Nations, New York

French philosopher Gaston Bachelard commented that "Chagall reads the Bible and suddenly the passages become light."[28]: xii  In 1973 Israel released a 12-stamp set with images of the stained-glass windows.[46]

The windows symbolize the twelve tribes of Israel who were blessed by Jacob and Moses in the verses which conclude Genesis and Deuteronomy. In those books, notes Leymarie, "The dying Moses repeated Jacob's solemn act and, in a somewhat different order, also blessed the twelve tribes of Israel who were about to enter the land of Canaan... In the synagogue, where the windows are distributed in the same way, the tribes form a symbolic guard of honor around the tabernacle."[28]: xii  Leymarie describes the physical and spiritual significance of the windows:

The essence of the Jerusalem Windows lies in color, in Chagall's magical ability to animate material and transform it into light. Words do not have the power to describe Chagall's color, its spirituality, its singing quality, its dazzling luminosity, its ever more subtle flow, and its sensitivity to the inflections of the soul and the transports of the imagination. It is simultaneously jewel-hard and foamy, reverberating and penetrating, radiating light from an unknown interior.[28]: xii 

At the dedication ceremony in 1962, Chagall described his feelings about the windows:

For me a stained glass window is a transparent partition between my heart and the heart of the world. Stained glass has to be serious and passionate. It is something elevating and exhilarating. It has to live through the perception of light. To read the Bible is to perceive a certain light, and the window has to make this obvious through its simplicity and grace... The thoughts have nested in me for many years, since the time when my feet walked on the Holy Land, when I prepared myself to create engravings of the Bible. They strengthened me and encouraged me to bring my modest gift to the Jewish people—that people that lived here thousands of years ago, among the other Semitic peoples.[21]: 145–146 

Peace, United Nations building (1964)

In 1964 Chagall created a stained-glass window, entitled Peace, for the UN in honor of Dag Hammarskjöld, the UN's second secretary general who was killed in an airplane crash in Africa in 1961. The window is about 15 feet (4.6 m) wide and 12 feet (3.7 m) high and contains symbols of peace and love along with musical symbols.[47] In 1967 he dedicated a stained-glass window to John D. Rockefeller in the Union Church of Pocantico Hills, New York.

Fraumünster in Zurich, Switzerland (1967)

The Fraumünster church in Zurich, Switzerland, founded in 853, is known for its five large stained glass windows created by Chagall in 1967. Each window is 32 feet (9.8 m) tall by 3 feet (0.91 m) wide. Religion historian James H. Charlesworth notes that it is "surprising how Christian symbols are featured in the works of an artist who comes from a strict and Orthodox Jewish background." He surmises that Chagall, as a result of his Russian background, often used Russian icons in his paintings, with their interpretations of Christian symbols. He explains that his chosen themes were usually derived from biblical stories, and frequently portrayed the "obedience and suffering of God's chosen people." One of the panels depicts Moses receiving the Torah, with rays of light from his head. At the top of another panel is a depiction of Jesus' crucifixion.[48][49]

St Stephan's church in Mainz, Germany (1978)

In 1978 he began creating windows for St Stephan's church in Mainz, Germany. Today, 200,000 visitors a year visit the church, and "tourists from the whole world pilgrim up St Stephan's Mount, to see the glowing blue stained glass windows by the artist Marc Chagall", states the city's web site. "St Stephan's is the only German church for which Chagall has created windows."[50]

The website also notes, "The colours address our vital consciousness directly, because they tell of optimism, hope and delight in life", says Monsignor Klaus Mayer, who imparts Chagall's work in mediations and books. He corresponded with Chagall during 1973, and succeeded in persuading the "master of colour and the biblical message" to create a sign for Jewish-Christian attachment and international understanding. Centuries earlier Mainz had been "the capital of European Jewry", and contained the largest Jewish community in Europe, notes historian John Man.[51]: 16 [52] In 1978, at the age of 91, Chagall created the first window and eight more followed. Chagall's collaborator Charles Marq complemented Chagall's work by adding several stained glass windows using the typical colors of Chagall.

All Saints' Church, Tudeley, UK (1963–1978)

All Saints' Church, Tudeley is the only church in the world to have all its twelve windows decorated by Chagall.[53] The other three religious buildings with complete sets of Chagall windows are the Hadassah Medical Center synagogue, the Chapel of Le Saillant, Limousin, and the Union Church of Pocantico Hills, New York.[54]

The windows at Tudeley were commissioned by Sir Henry and Lady Rosemary d'Avigdor-Goldsmid as a memorial tribute to their daughter Sarah, who died in 1963 aged 21 in a sailing accident off Rye. When Chagall arrived for the dedication of the east window in 1967, and saw the church for the first time, he exclaimed "C'est magnifique! Je les ferai tous!" ("It's beautiful! I will do them all!") Over the next ten years Chagall designed the remaining eleven windows, made again in collaboration with the glassworker Charles Marq in his workshop at Reims in northern France. The last windows were installed in 1985, just before Chagall's death.

Chichester Cathedral, West Sussex, UK

On the north side of Chichester Cathedral there is a stained glass window designed and created by Chagall at the age of 90. The window, his last commissioned work, was inspired by Psalm 150; 'Let everything that hath breath praise the Lord' at the suggestion of Dean Walter Hussey.[55] The window was unveiled by the Duchess of Kent in 1978.[56]

America Windows, Chicago

Chagall visited Chicago in the early 1970s to install his mural The Four Seasons, and at that time was inspired to create a set of stained glass windows for the Art Institute of Chicago.[57] After discussions with the Art Institute and further reflection, Chagall made the windows a tribute to the American Bicentennial, and in particular the commitment of the United States to cultural and religious freedom.[57] The windows appeared prominently in the 1986 movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off.[58] From 2005 to 2010, the windows were moved due to nearby construction on a new wing of the Art Institute, and for archival cleaning.[57]

Murals, theatre sets and costumes

Chagall first worked on stage designs in 1914 while living in Russia, under the inspiration of the theatrical designer and artist Léon Bakst.[59] It was during this period in the Russian theatre that formerly static ideas of stage design were, according to Cogniat, "being swept away in favor of a wholly arbitrary sense of space with different dimensions, perspectives, colors and rhythms."[24]: 66  These changes appealed to Chagall who had been experimenting with Cubism and wanted a way to enliven his images. Designing murals and stage designs, Chagall's "dreams sprang to life and became an actual movement."[24]

As a result, Chagall played an important role in Russian artistic life during that time and "was one of the most important forces in the current urge towards anti-realism" which helped the new Russia invent "astonishing" creations. Many of his designs were done for the Jewish Theatre in Moscow which put on numerous Jewish plays by playwrights such as Gogol and Singe. Chagall's set designs helped create illusory atmospheres which became the essence of the theatrical performances.[60]

After leaving Russia, twenty years passed before he was again offered a chance to design theatre sets. In the years between, his paintings still included harlequins, clowns and acrobats, which Cogniat notes "convey his sentimental attachment to and nostalgia for the theatre".[24] His first assignment designing sets after Russia was for the ballet "Aleko" in 1942, while living in America. In 1945 he was also commissioned to design the sets and costumes for Stravinsky's Firebird. These designs contributed greatly towards his enhanced reputation in America as a major artist and, as of 2013, are still in use by New York City Ballet.

Cogniat describes how Chagall's designs "immerse the spectator in a luminous, colored fairy-land where forms are mistily defined and the spaces themselves seem animated with whirlwinds or explosions."[24] His technique of using theatrical color in this way reached its peak when Chagall returned to Paris and designed the sets for Ravel's Daphnis and Chloë in 1958.

In 1964 he repainted the ceiling of the Paris Opera using 2,400 square feet (220 m2) of canvas. He painted two monumental murals which hang on opposite sides of the new Metropolitan Opera house at Lincoln Center in New York which opened in 1966. The pieces, The Sources of Music and The Triumph of Music, which hang from the top-most balcony level and extend down to the Grand Tier lobby level, were completed in France and shipped to New York, and are covered by a system of panels during the hours in which the opera house receives direct sunlight to prevent fading. He also designed the sets and costumes for a new production of Die Zauberflöte for the company which opened in February 1967[61] and was used through the 1981/1982 season.

Tapestries

 
Ceramic plate titled Moses
 
Chagall Art Centre in Vitebsk, Belarus

Chagall also designed tapestries which were woven under the direction of Yvette Cauquil-Prince, who also collaborated with Picasso. These tapestries are much rarer than his paintings, with only 40 of them ever reaching the commercial market.[62] Chagall designed three tapestries for the state hall of the Knesset in Israel, along with 12-floor mosaics and a wall mosaic.[63]

Ceramics and sculpture

Chagall began learning about ceramics and sculpture while living in south France. Ceramics became a fashion in the Côte d'Azur with various workshops starting up at Antibes, Vence and Vallauris. He took classes along with other known artists including Picasso and Fernand Léger. At first Chagall painted existing pieces of pottery but soon expanded into designing his own, which began his work as a sculptor as a complement to his painting.

After experimenting with pottery and dishes he moved into large ceramic murals. However, he was never satisfied with the limits imposed by the square tile segments which Cogniat notes "imposed on him a discipline which prevented the creation of a plastic image."[24]: 76 

Final years and death

Author Serena Davies writes that "By the time he died in France in 1985—the last surviving master of European modernism, outliving Joan Miró by two years—he had experienced at first hand the high hopes and crushing disappointments of the Russian revolution, and had witnessed the end of the Pale of Settlement, the near annihilation of European Jewry, and the obliteration of Vitebsk, his home town, where only 118 of a population of 240,000 survived the Second World War."[64]

Chagall's final work was a commissioned piece of art for the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago. The maquette painting titled Job had been completed, but Chagall died just before the completion of the tapestry.[65] Yvette Cauquil-Prince was weaving the tapestry under Chagall's supervision and was the last person to work with Chagall. She left Vava and Marc Chagall's home at 4 pm on 28 March after discussing and matching the final colors from the maquette painting for the tapestry. He died that evening.[66]

His relationship with his Jewish identity was "unresolved and tragic", Davies states. He would have died without Jewish rites, had not a Jewish stranger stepped forward and said the kaddish, the Jewish prayer for the dead, over his coffin.[64] Chagall is buried alongside his last wife Valentina "Vava" Brodsky Chagall, in the multi-denominational cemetery in the traditional artists' town of Saint-Paul-de-Vence, in the French region of Provence.

Gallery

Legacy and influence

Chagall biographer Jackie Wullschlager praises him as a "pioneer of modern art and one of its greatest figurative painters... [who] invented a visual language that recorded the thrill and terror of the twentieth century."[10] She adds:

On his canvases we read the triumph of modernism, the breakthrough in art to an expression of inner life that ... is one of the last century's signal legacies. At the same time Chagall was personally swept up in the horrors of European history between 1914 and 1945: world wars, revolution, ethnic persecution, the murder and exile of millions. In an age when many major artists fled reality for abstraction, he distilled his experiences of suffering and tragedy into images at once immediate, simple, and symbolic to which everyone could respond.[10]: 4 

Art historians Ingo Walther and Rainer Metzger refer to Chagall as a "poet, dreamer, and exotic apparition." They add that throughout his long life the "role of outsider and artistic eccentric" came naturally to him, as he seemed to be a kind of intermediary between worlds: "as a Jew with a lordly disdain for the ancient ban on image-making; as a Russian who went beyond the realm of familiar self-sufficiency; or the son of poor parents, growing up in a large and needy family." Yet he went on to establish himself in the sophisticated world of "elegant artistic salons."[67]: 7 

Through his imagination and strong memories Chagall was able to use typical motifs and subjects in most of his work: village scenes, peasant life, and intimate views of the small world of the Jewish village (shtetl). His tranquil figures and simple gestures helped produce a "monumental sense of dignity" by translating everyday Jewish rituals into a "timeless realm of iconic peacefulness".[67]: 8  Leymarie writes that Chagall "transcended the limits of his century. He has unveiled possibilities unsuspected by an art that had lost touch with the Bible, and in doing so he has achieved a wholly new synthesis of Jewish culture long ignored by painting." He adds that although Chagall's art cannot be confined to religion, his "most moving and original contributions, what he called 'his message,' are those drawn from religious or, more precisely, Biblical sources."[28]: x 

Walther and Metzger try to summarize Chagall's contribution to art:

His life and art together added up to this image of a lonesome visionary, a citizen of the world with much of the child still in him, a stranger lost in wonder—an image which the artist did everything to cultivate. Profoundly religious and with a deep love of the homeland, his work is arguably the most urgent appeal for tolerance and respect of all that is different that modern times could make.[67]: 7 

Andre Malraux praised him. He said: "[Chagall] is the greatest image-maker of this century. He has looked at our world with the light of freedom, and seen it with the colours of love."[68]

Art market

A 1928 Chagall oil painting, Les Amoureux, measuring 117.3 x 90.5 cm, depicting Bella Rosenfeld, the artist's first wife and adopted home Paris, sold for $28.5 million (with fees) at Sotheby's New York, 14 November 2017, almost doubling Chagall's 27-year-old $14.85 million auction record.[69][70]

In October 2010, his painting Bestiaire et Musique, depicting a bride and a fiddler floating in a night sky amid circus performers and animals, "was the star lot" at an auction in Hong Kong. When it sold for $4.1 million, it became the most expensive contemporary Western painting ever sold in Asia.[71]

In 2013, previously unknown works by Chagall were discovered in the stash of artworks hidden away by the son of one of Hitler's art dealers, Hildebrand Gurlitt.[72]

Theatre

In the 1990s, Daniel Jamieson wrote The Flying Lovers of Vitebsk, a play concerning the life of Chagall and partner Bella. It has been revived multiple times, most recently in 2020 with Emma Rice directing a production which was live-streamed from the Bristol Old Vic and then made available for on-demand viewing, in partnership with theaters around the world.[73] This production had Marc Antolin in the role of Chagall and Audrey Brisson playing Bella Chagall; produced during the COVID epidemic, it required the entire crew to quarantine together to make the live performance and broadcast possible.[74]

Exhibitions and tributes

 
Bust of Marc Chagall in Celebrity Alley in Kielce (Poland)

During his lifetime, Chagall received several honors:

1963 documentary

Chagall, a short 1963 documentary, features Chagall. It won the 1964 Academy Award for Best Short Subject Documentary.

Postage stamp tributes

Because of the international acclaim he enjoyed and the popularity of his art, a number of countries have issued commemorative stamps in his honor depicting examples from his works. In 1963 France issued a stamp of his painting, The Married Couple of the Eiffel Tower. In 1969, Israel produced a stamp depicting his King David painting. In 1973 Israel released a 12-stamp set with images of the stained-glass windows that he created for the Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center Synagogue; each window was made to signify one of the "Twelve Tribes of Israel".[46]

In 1987, as a tribute to recognize the centennial of his birth in Belarus, seven nations engaged in a special omnibus program and released postage stamps in his honor. The countries which issued the stamps included Antigua & Barbuda, Dominica, The Gambia, Ghana, Sierra Leone and Grenada, which together produced 48 stamps and 10 souvenir sheets. Although the stamps all portray his various masterpieces, the names of the artwork are not listed on the stamps.[46]

Exhibitions

There were also several major exhibitions of Chagall's work during his lifetime and following his death.

  • In 1967, the Louvre in Paris exhibited 17 large-scale paintings and 38 gouaches, under the title of "Message Biblique", which he donated to the nation of France on condition that a museum was to be built for them in Nice.[15]: 201  In 1969 work began on the museum, named Musée National Message Biblique Marc Chagall. It was completed and inaugurated on 7 July 1973, on Chagall's birthday. Today it contains monumental paintings on biblical themes, three stained-glass windows, tapestries, a large mosaic and numerous gouaches for the "Bible series."[15]: 208 
  • From 1969 to 1970, the Grand Palais in Paris held the largest Chagall exhibition to date, including 474 works. The exhibition was called "Hommage a Marc Chagall", was opened by the French President and "proved an enormous success with the public and critics alike."[15]
  • The Dynamic Museum in Dakar, Senegal held an exhibition of his work in 1971.[77]
  • In 1973, he traveled to the Soviet Union, his first visit back since he left in 1922. The Tretiakov Gallery in Moscow had a special exhibition for the occasion of his visit. He was able to see again the murals he long ago made for the Jewish Theatre. In St. Petersburg, he was reunited with two of his sisters, whom he had not seen for more than 50 years.
  • In 1982, the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, Sweden organized a retrospective exhibition which later traveled to Denmark.
  • In 1985, the Royal Academy in London presented a major retrospective which later traveled to Philadelphia. Chagall was too old to attend the London opening and died a few months later.
  • In 2003, a major retrospective of Chagall's career was organized by the Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Paris, in conjunction with the Musée National Message Biblique Marc Chagall, Nice, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
  • In 2007, an exhibition of his work titled "Chagall of Miracles", was held at Il Complesso del Vittoriano in Rome, Italy.
  • The regional art museum in Novosibirsk had a Chagall exhibition on his biblical subjects[78] between 16 June 2010 and 29 August 2010.
  • The Musée d'art et d'histoire du judaïsme in Paris had a Chagall exhibition titled "Chagall and the Bible" in 2011.
  • The Luxembourg Museum in Paris held a Chagall retrospective in 2013.[79]
  • The Jewish Museum in New York City has held multiple exhibitions on Chagall including the 2001 exhibit Marc Chagall: Early Works from Russian Collections[80] and the exhibit 2013 Chagall: Love, War and Exhile.[81]
  • Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt "World in Turmoil" with paintings from the 1930s and 1940s between 4 November 2022 to 19 February 2023.[82]
Current exhibitions and permanent displays
 
Montréal Muséum of Fine Arts, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montréal. 28 January – 11 June 2017. Chagall: Colour and Music is the biggest Canadian exhibition ever devoted to Marc Chagall.
 
Stained glass windows in Reims Cathedral, 1974
Other tributes

During the closing ceremony of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, a Chagall-like float with clouds and dancers passed by upside down hovering above 130 costumed dancers, 40 stilt-walkers and a violinist playing folk music.[87][88]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ UK: /ʃæˈɡæl/ sha-GAL,[5] US: /ʃəˈɡɑːl, ʃəˈɡæl/ shə-GA(H)L;[6][7] French: [maʁk ʃaɡal]; Yiddish: מאַרק זאַכאַראָוויטש שאַגאַל; Russian: Марк Заха́рович Шага́л [ˈmark ʂɐˈɡal]; Belarusian: Марк Захаравіч Шагал [ˈmark ʂaˈɣal].
  2. ^ Most sources uncritically repeat the information that he was born on 7 July 1887, without specifying whether this was a Gregorian or Julian date. However, this date is incorrect. He was born on 24 June 1887 under the then Julian calendar, which translates to 6 July 1887 in the Gregorian calendar, the gap between the calendars in 1887 being 12 days. Chagall himself miscalculated the Gregorian date when he arrived in Paris in 1910, using the then-current 13-day gap, not realising that this applied to births that occurred only from 1900 onwards. For further details, see Marc Chagall and His Times: A Documentary Narrative, p. 65.

References

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  3. ^ Polonsky, Gill, Chagall. Phaidon, 1998. p. 25
  4. ^ Haggard-Leirens, Virginia (1987). Sieben Jahre der Fülle Leben mit Chagall (in German). Zürich: Diana. ISBN 3-905414-48-1. OCLC 26998475.
  5. ^ "Chagall, Marc". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.[dead link]
  6. ^ "Chagall". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
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  8. ^ McAloon, Jonathan (28 June 2018). "Marc Chagall's Jewish Identity Was Crucial to His Best Work". Artsy. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
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Bibliography

  • Antanas Andrijauskas, Litvak Art in the Context of the École de Paris. Library of Vilnius Auction, Vilnius, 2008. ISBN 978-609- 8014-01-3.
  • Chagall, Marc (1947). Heywood, Robert B. (ed.). The Works of the Mind: The Artist. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. OCLC 752682744.
  • Sidney Alexander, Marc Chagall: A Biography G.P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1978.
  • Monica Bohm-Duchen, Chagall (Art & Ideas) Phaidon, London, 1998. ISBN 0-7148-3160-3
  • Marc Chagall, My Life, Peter Owen Ltd, London, 1965 (republished in 2003) ISBN 978-0-7206-1186-1
  • Susann Compton, Chagall Harry N. Abrams, New York, 1985.
  • Sylvie Forestier, Nathalie Hazan-Brunet, Dominique Jarrassé, Benoit Marq, Meret Meyer, Chagall: The Stained Glass Windows. Paulist Press, Mahwah, 2017.
  • Benjamin Harshav, Marc Chagall and His Times: A Documentary Narrative, Stanford University Press, Palo Alto, 2004. ISBN 978-0-8047-4214-6
  • Benjamin Harshav, Marc Chagall on Art and Culture, Stanford University Press, Palo Alto, 2003. ISBN 0-8047-4830-6
  • Aleksandr Kamensky, Marc Chagall, An Artist From Russia, Trilistnik, Moscow, 2005 (In Russian)
  • Aleksandr Kamensky, Chagall: The Russian Years 1907–1922., Rizzoli, New York, 1988 (Abridged version of Marc Chagall, An Artist From Russia) ISBN 0-8478-1080-1
  • Moynahan, Brian (1992). Comrades: 1917 – Russia in Revolution. Brown and Company. ISBN 0-316-58698-6.
  • Aaron Nikolaj, Marc Chagall., Rowohlt Verlag, Hamburg, 2003 (In German)
  • Gianni Pozzi, Claudia Saraceni, L. R. Galante, Masters of Art: Chagall, Peter Bedrick Books, New York, 1990. ISBN 978-0-8722-6527-1
  • V.A. Shishanov,Vitebsk Museum of Modern Art – a History of Creation and a Collection 1918–1941, Medisont, Minsk, 2007.
  • Jonathan Wilson, Marc Chagall, Schocken Books, New York, 2007 ISBN 0-8052-4201-5
  • Jackie Wullschlager, Chagall: A Biography Knopf, New York, 2008
  • Ziva Amishia Maisels & David Glasser, Apocalypse: Unveiling a Lost Masterpiece by Marc Chagall, Ben Uri Gallery and Museum, 2010
  • Shishanov, V.A. Polish-language periodicals about Marc Chagall (1912–1940) / V. Shishanov, F. Shkirando // Chagall's collection. Issue 5: materials of the XXVI and XXVII Chagall readings in Vitebsk (2017–2019) / M. Chagall Museum; [editorial board: L. Khmelnitskaya (chief editor), I. Voronova]. – Minsk: National Library of Belarus, 2019. – P. 57–78. Russian language

External links

  • Marc Chagall Unofficial website
  • Marc Chagall Art website
  • Marc Chagall's Famous Belarusians page on Official Website of The Republic of Belarus 17 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • 55 artworks by Marc Chagall at the Ben Uri site
  • Floirat, Anetta. 2019, "Marc Chagall (1887–1985) and Igor Stravinsky (1882–1971), a painter and a composer facing similar twentieth-century challenges, a parallel. [revised version]", Academia.edu.

marc, chagall, chagall, redirects, here, other, uses, chagall, disambiguation, born, moishe, shagal, july, june, 1887, march, 1985, russian, french, artist, early, modernist, associated, with, several, major, artistic, styles, created, works, wide, range, arti. Chagall redirects here For other uses see Chagall disambiguation Marc Chagall a born Moishe Shagal 6 July O S 24 June 1887 28 March 1985 was a Russian French artist 2 1 An early modernist he was associated with several major artistic styles and created works in a wide range of artistic formats including painting drawings book illustrations stained glass stage sets ceramics tapestries and fine art prints Marc ChagallChagall c 1920BornMoishe Shagal 1887 07 06 6 July 1887 N S Liozna near Vitebsk Russian Empire 1 Died28 March 1985 1985 03 28 aged 97 Saint Paul de Vence FranceNationalityRussian later French 2 Known forPainting stained glassNotable workSee list of artworks by Marc ChagallMovementCubism ExpressionismSpousesBella Rosenfeld m 1915 died 1944 wbr Valentina Vava Brodsky m 1952 wbr 3 ChildrenIda Chagall with Bella Chagall David McNeil with Virginia Haggard McNeil 4 Born in the Russian Empire today Belarus he was of Jewish origin Before World War I he travelled between Saint Petersburg Paris and Berlin During this period he created his own mixture and style of modern art based on his idea of Eastern Europe and Jewish folk culture He spent the wartime years in Belarus becoming one of the country s most distinguished artists and a member of the modernist avant garde founding the Vitebsk Arts College before leaving again for Paris in 1923 Art critic Robert Hughes referred to Chagall as the quintessential Jewish artist of the twentieth century According to art historian Michael J Lewis Chagall was considered to be the last survivor of the first generation of European modernists For decades he had also been respected as the world s pre eminent Jewish artist 8 Using the medium of stained glass he produced windows for the cathedrals of Reims and Metz as well as the Fraumunster in Zurich windows for the UN and the Art Institute of Chicago and the Jerusalem Windows in Israel He also did large scale paintings including part of the ceiling of the Paris Opera He had two basic reputations writes Lewis as a pioneer of modernism and as a major Jewish artist He experienced modernism s golden age in Paris where he synthesized the art forms of Cubism Symbolism and Fauvism and the influence of Fauvism gave rise to Surrealism Yet throughout these phases of his style he remained most emphatically a Jewish artist whose work was one long dreamy reverie of life in his native village of Vitebsk 9 When Matisse dies Pablo Picasso remarked in the 1950s Chagall will be the only painter left who understands what colour really is 10 Contents 1 Early life and education 1 1 Early life 1 2 Art education 1 3 Artistic inspiration 2 Art career 2 1 Russian Empire 1906 1910 2 2 France 1910 1914 2 3 Russia 1914 1922 2 4 France 1923 1941 2 4 1 The Bible illustrations 2 4 2 Nazi campaigns against modern art 2 4 3 Escaping occupied France 2 5 United States 1941 1948 2 5 1 Aleko ballet 1942 2 5 2 Coming to grips with World War II 2 5 3 Post war years 2 6 France 1948 1985 2 6 1 Ceiling of the Paris Opera 1963 3 Art styles and techniques 3 1 Color 3 2 Subject matter 3 2 1 From life memories to fantasy 3 2 2 Jewish themes 4 Other types of art 4 1 Stained glass windows 4 1 1 Jerusalem Windows 1962 4 1 2 Peace United Nations building 1964 4 1 3 Fraumunster in Zurich Switzerland 1967 4 1 4 St Stephan s church in Mainz Germany 1978 4 1 5 All Saints Church Tudeley UK 1963 1978 4 1 6 Chichester Cathedral West Sussex UK 4 1 7 America Windows Chicago 4 2 Murals theatre sets and costumes 4 3 Tapestries 4 4 Ceramics and sculpture 5 Final years and death 6 Gallery 7 Legacy and influence 7 1 Art market 8 Theatre 9 Exhibitions and tributes 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksEarly life and educationEarly life Marc Chagall s childhood home in Vitebsk Belarus Currently site of the Marc Chagall Museum Marc Chagall 1912 The Spoonful of Milk La Cuilleree de lait gouache on paper Marc Chagall was born Moishe Shagal in a Jewish family in Liozna 1 near the city of Vitebsk Belarus then part of the Russian Empire in 1887 b 11 At the time of his birth Vitebsk s population was about 66 000 Half of the population were Jewish 9 A picturesque city of churches and synagogues it was called Russian Toledo by artist Ilya Repin after the cosmopolitan city of the former Spanish Empire 12 As the city was built mostly of wood little of it survived years of occupation and destruction during World War II Chagall was the eldest of nine children The family name Shagal is a variant of the name Segal which in a Jewish community was usually borne by a Levitic family 13 His father Khatskl Zachar Shagal was employed by a herring merchant and his mother Feige Ite sold groceries from their home His father worked hard carrying heavy barrels but earning only 20 roubles each month the average wages across the Russian Empire was 13 roubles a month Chagall would later include fish motifs out of respect for his father writes Chagall biographer Jacob Baal Teshuva citation needed Chagall wrote of these early years Day after day winter and summer at six o clock in the morning my father got up and went off to the synagogue There he said his usual prayer for some dead man or other On his return he made ready the samovar drank some tea and went to work Hellish work the work of a galley slave Why try to hide it How tell about it No word will ever ease my father s lot There was always plenty of butter and cheese on our table Buttered bread like an eternal symbol was never out of my childish hands 14 One of the main sources of income of the Jewish population of the town was from the manufacture of clothing that was sold throughout the Russian Empire They also made furniture and various agricultural tools 15 From the late 18th century to the First World War the Imperial Russian government confined Jews to living within the Pale of Settlement which included modern Ukraine Belarus Poland Lithuania and Latvia almost exactly corresponding to the territory of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth recently taken over by Imperial Russia This caused the creation of Jewish market villages shtetls throughout today s Eastern Europe with their own markets schools hospitals and other community institutions 16 14 Chagall wrote as a boy I felt at every step that I was a Jew people made me feel it 17 18 During a pogrom Chagall wrote that The street lamps are out I feel panicky especially in front of butchers windows There you can see calves that are still alive lying beside the butchers hatchets and knives 18 19 When asked by some pogromniks Jew or not Chagall remembered thinking My pockets are empty my fingers sensitive my legs weak and they are out for blood My death would be futile I so wanted to live 18 19 Chagall denied being a Jew leading the pogromniks to shout All right Get along 18 19 Most of what is known about Chagall s early life has come from his autobiography My Life In it he described the major influence that the culture of Hasidic Judaism had on his life as an artist Chagall related how he realised that the Jewish traditions in which he had grown up were fast disappearing and that he needed to document them Vitebsk itself had been a centre of that culture dating from the 1730s with its teachings derived from the Kabbalah Chagall scholar Susan Tumarkin Goodman describes the links and sources of his art to his early home Chagall s art can be understood as the response to a situation that has long marked the history of Russian Jews Though they were cultural innovators who made important contributions to the broader society Jews were considered outsiders in a frequently hostile society Chagall himself was born of a family steeped in religious life his parents were observant Hasidic Jews who found spiritual satisfaction in a life defined by their faith and organized by prayer 16 14 Art education Portrait of Chagall by Yehuda Pen his first art teacher in Vitebsk In the Russian Empire at that time Jewish children were not allowed to attend regular schools or universities Their movement within the city was also restricted Chagall therefore received his primary education at the local Jewish religious school where he studied Hebrew and the Bible At the age of 13 his mother tried to enroll him in a regular high school and he recalled But in that school they don t take Jews Without a moment s hesitation my courageous mother walks up to a professor She offered the headmaster 50 roubles to let him attend which he accepted 14 A turning point of his artistic life came when he first noticed a fellow student drawing Baal Teshuva writes that for the young Chagall watching someone draw was like a vision a revelation in black and white Chagall would later say that there was no art of any kind in his family s home and the concept was totally alien to him When Chagall asked the schoolmate how he learned to draw his friend replied Go and find a book in the library idiot choose any picture you like and just copy it He soon began copying images from books and found the experience so rewarding he then decided he wanted to become an artist 15 He eventually confided to his mother I want to be a painter although she could not yet understand his sudden interest in art or why he would choose a vocation that seemed so impractical writes Goodman The young Chagall explained There s a place in town if I m admitted and if I complete the course I ll come out a regular artist I d be so happy It was 1906 and he had noticed the studio of Yehuda Yuri Pen a realist artist who operated a drawing school in Vitebsk at the same time future artists El Lissitzky and Ossip Zadkine were also Pen s students Due to Chagall s youth and lack of income Pen offered to teach him free of charge However after a few months at the school Chagall realized that academic portrait painting did not suit his desires 15 Artistic inspiration Marc Chagall 1912 Calvary Golgotha oil on canvas 174 6 192 4 cm Museum of Modern Art New York Alternative titles Kreuzigung Bild 2 Christus gewidmet Golgotha Crucifixion Dedicated to Christ Sold through Galerie Der Sturm Herwarth Walden Berlin to Bernhard Koehler 1849 1927 Berlin 1913 Exhibited Erster Deutscher Herbstsalon Berlin 1913 Goodman notes that during this period in Imperial Russia Jews had two ways for joining the art world one was to hide or deny one s Jewish roots the other the one that Chagall chose was to cherish and publicly express one s Jewish roots by integrating them into art For Chagall this was also his means of self assertion and an expression of principle 16 14 Chagall biographer Franz Meyer explains that with the connections between his art and early life the hassidic spirit is still the basis and source of nourishment for his art 20 Lewis adds As cosmopolitan an artist as he would later become his storehouse of visual imagery would never expand beyond the landscape of his childhood with its snowy streets wooden houses and ubiquitous fiddlers with scenes of childhood so indelibly in one s mind and to invest them with an emotional charge so intense that it could only be discharged obliquely through an obsessive repetition of the same cryptic symbols and ideograms 9 Years later at the age of 57 while living in the United States Chagall confirmed this when he published an open letter entitled To My City Vitebsk Why Why did I leave you many years ago You thought the boy seeks something seeks such a special subtlety that color descending like stars from the sky and landing bright and transparent like snow on our roofs Where did he get it How would it come to a boy like him I don t know why he couldn t find it with us in the city in his homeland Maybe the boy is crazy but crazy for the sake of art You thought I can see I am etched in the boy s heart but he is still flying he is still striving to take off he has wind in his head I did not live with you but I didn t have one single painting that didn t breathe with your spirit and reflection 21 Art careerRussian Empire 1906 1910 In 1906 he moved to Saint Petersburg which was then the capital of the Russian Empire and the center of the country s artistic life with its famous art schools Since Jews were not permitted into the city without an internal passport he managed to get a temporary passport from a friend He enrolled in a prestigious art school and studied there for two years 15 By 1907 he had begun painting naturalistic self portraits and landscapes Chagall was an active member of the irregular freemasonic lodge the Grand Orient of Russia s Peoples 22 He belonged to the Vitebsk lodge Between 1908 and 1910 Chagall was a student of Leon Bakst at the Zvantseva School of Drawing and Painting While in Saint Petersburg he discovered experimental theater and the work of such artists as Paul Gauguin 23 Bakst also Jewish was a designer of decorative art and was famous as a draftsman designer of stage sets and costumes for the Ballets Russes and helped Chagall by acting as a role model for Jewish success Bakst moved to Paris a year later Art historian Raymond Cogniat writes that after living and studying art on his own for four years Chagall entered into the mainstream of contemporary art His apprenticeship over Russia had played a memorable initial role in his life 24 30 Chagall stayed in Saint Petersburg until 1910 often visiting Vitebsk where he met Bella Rosenfeld In My Life Chagall described his first meeting her Her silence is mine her eyes mine It is as if she knows everything about my childhood my present my future as if she can see right through me 15 22 Bella later wrote of meeting him When you did catch a glimpse of his eyes they were as blue as if they d fallen straight out of the sky They were strange eyes long almond shaped and each seemed to sail along by itself like a little boat 25 France 1910 1914 Marc Chagall 1911 12 The Drunkard Le saoul 1912 oil on canvas 85 115 cm Private collection Marc Chagall 1912 The Fiddler an inspiration for the musical Fiddler on the Roof 26 In 1910 Chagall relocated to Paris to develop his artistic style Art historian and curator James Sweeney notes that when Chagall first arrived in Paris Cubism was the dominant art form and French art was still dominated by the materialistic outlook of the 19th century But Chagall arrived from Russia with a ripe color gift a fresh unashamed response to sentiment a feeling for simple poetry and a sense of humor he adds These notions were alien to Paris at that time and as a result his first recognition came not from other painters but from poets such as Blaise Cendrars and Guillaume Apollinaire 27 7 Art historian Jean Leymarie observes that Chagall began thinking of art as emerging from the internal being outward from the seen object to the psychic outpouring which was the reverse of the Cubist way of creating 28 He therefore developed friendships with Guillaume Apollinaire and other avant garde artists including Robert Delaunay and Fernand Leger 29 Baal Teshuva writes that Chagall s dream of Paris the city of light and above all of freedom had come true 15 33 His first days were a hardship for the 23 year old Chagall who was lonely in the big city and unable to speak French Some days he felt like fleeing back to Russia as he daydreamed while he painted about the riches of Slavic folklore his Hasidic experiences his family and especially Bella In Paris he enrolled at Academie de La Palette an avant garde school of art where the painters Jean Metzinger Andre Dunoyer de Segonzac and Henri Le Fauconnier taught and also found work at another academy He would spend his free hours visiting galleries and salons especially the Louvre artists he came to admire included Rembrandt the Le Nain brothers Chardin van Gogh Renoir Pissarro Matisse Gauguin Courbet Millet Manet Monet Delacroix and others It was in Paris that he learned the technique of gouache which he used to paint Belarusian scenes He also visited Montmartre and the Latin Quarter and was happy just breathing Parisian air 15 Baal Teshuva describes this new phase in Chagall s artistic development Chagall was exhilarated intoxicated as he strolled through the streets and along the banks of the Seine Everything about the French capital excited him the shops the smell of fresh bread in the morning the markets with their fresh fruit and vegetables the wide boulevards the cafes and restaurants and above all the Eiffel Tower Another completely new world that opened up for him was the kaleidoscope of colors and forms in the works of French artists Chagall enthusiastically reviewed their many different tendencies having to rethink his position as an artist and decide what creative avenue he wanted to pursue 15 33 Marc Chagall 1912 Le Marchand de bestiaux The Drover The Cattle Dealer oil on canvas 97 1 x 202 5 cm Kunstmuseum Basel During his time in Paris Chagall was constantly reminded of his home in Vitebsk as Paris was also home to many painters writers poets composers dancers and other emigres from the Russian Empire However night after night he painted until dawn only then going to bed for a few hours and resisted the many temptations of the big city at night 15 44 My homeland exists only in my soul he once said 28 viii He continued painting Jewish motifs and subjects from his memories of Vitebsk although he included Parisian scenes the Eiffel Tower in particular along with portraits Many of his works were updated versions of paintings he had made in Russia transposed into Fauvist or Cubist keys 9 Marc Chagall 1912 Still life Nature morte oil on canvas private collection Chagall developed a whole repertoire of quirky motifs ghostly figures floating in the sky the gigantic fiddler dancing on miniature dollhouses the livestock and transparent wombs and within them tiny offspring sleeping upside down 9 The majority of his scenes of life in Vitebsk were painted while living in Paris and in a sense they were dreams notes Lewis Their undertone of yearning and loss with a detached and abstract appearance caused Apollinaire to be struck by this quality calling them surnaturel His animal human hybrids and airborne phantoms would later become a formative influence on Surrealism 9 Chagall however did not want his work to be associated with any school or movement and considered his own personal language of symbols to be meaningful to himself But Sweeney notes that others often still associate his work with illogical and fantastic painting especially when he uses curious representational juxtapositions 27 10 Sweeney writes that This is Chagall s contribution to contemporary art the reawakening of a poetry of representation avoiding factual illustration on the one hand and non figurative abstractions on the other Andre Breton said that with him alone the metaphor made its triumphant return to modern painting 27 7 Russia 1914 1922 Because he missed his fiancee Bella who was still in Vitebsk He thought about her day and night writes Baal Teshuva and was afraid of losing her Chagall decided to accept an invitation from a noted art dealer in Berlin to exhibit his work his intention being to continue on to Belarus marry Bella and then return with her to Paris Chagall took 40 canvases and 160 gouaches watercolors and drawings to be exhibited The exhibit held at Herwarth Walden s Sturm Gallery was a huge success The German critics positively sang his praises 15 People s Art School where the Vitebsk Museum of Modern Art was situated After the exhibit he continued on to Vitebsk where he planned to stay only long enough to marry Bella However after a few weeks the First World War began closing the Russian border for an indefinite period A year later he married Bella Rosenfeld and they had their first child Ida Before the marriage Chagall had difficulty convincing Bella s parents that he would be a suitable husband for their daughter They were worried about her marrying a painter from a poor family and wondered how he would support her Becoming a successful artist now became a goal and inspiration According to Lewis T he euphoric paintings of this time which show the young couple floating balloon like over Vitebsk its wooden buildings faceted in the Delaunay manner are the most lighthearted of his career 9 His wedding pictures were also a subject he would return to in later years as he thought about this period of his life 15 75 Bella with White Collar 1917 In 1915 Chagall began exhibiting his work in Moscow first exhibiting his works at a well known salon and in 1916 exhibiting pictures in St Petersburg He again showed his art at a Moscow exhibition of avant garde artists This exposure brought recognition and a number of wealthy collectors began buying his art He also began illustrating a number of Yiddish books with ink drawings He illustrated I L Peretz s The Magician in 1917 30 Chagall was 30 years old and had begun to become well known 15 77 The October Revolution of 1917 was a dangerous time for Chagall although it also offered opportunity Chagall wrote he came to fear Bolshevik orders pinned on fences writing The factories were stopping The horizons opened Space and emptiness No more bread The black lettering on the morning posters made me feel sick at heart 31 Chagall was often hungry for days later remembering watching a bride the beggars and the poor wretches weighted down with bundles leading him to conclude that the new regime had turned the Russian Empire upside down the way I turn my pictures 31 By then he was one of Imperial Russia s most distinguished artists and a member of the modernist avant garde which enjoyed special privileges and prestige as the aesthetic arm of the revolution 9 He was offered a notable position as a commissar of visual arts for the country clarification needed but preferred something less political and instead accepted a job as commissar of arts for Vitebsk This resulted in his founding the Vitebsk Arts College which adds Lewis became the most distinguished school of art in the Soviet Union It obtained for its faculty some of the most important artists in the country such as El Lissitzky and Kazimir Malevich He also added his first teacher Yehuda Pen Chagall tried to create an atmosphere of a collective of independently minded artists each with their own unique style However this would soon prove to be difficult as a few of the key faculty members preferred a Suprematist art of squares and circles and disapproved of Chagall s attempt at creating bourgeois individualism Chagall then resigned as commissar and moved to Moscow In Moscow he was offered a job as stage designer for the newly formed State Jewish Chamber Theater 32 It was set to begin operation in early 1921 with a number of plays by Sholem Aleichem For its opening he created a number of large background murals using techniques he learned from Bakst his early teacher One of the main murals was 9 feet 2 7 m tall by 24 feet 7 3 m long and included images of various lively subjects such as dancers fiddlers acrobats and farm animals One critic at the time called it Hebrew jazz in paint Chagall created it as a storehouse of symbols and devices notes Lewis 9 The murals constituted a landmark in the history of the theatre and were forerunners of his later large scale works including murals for the New York Metropolitan Opera and the Paris Opera 15 87 The First World War ended in 1918 but the Russian Civil War continued and famine spread The Chagalls found it necessary to move to a smaller less expensive town near Moscow although Chagall now had to commute to Moscow daily using crowded trains In 1921 he worked as an art teacher along with his friend sculptor Isaac Itkind in a Jewish boys shelter in suburban Malakhovka which housed young refugees orphaned by pogroms 10 270 While there he created a series of illustrations for the Yiddish poetry cycle Grief written by David Hofstein who was another teacher at the Malakhovka shelter 10 273 After spending the years between 1921 and 1922 living in primitive conditions he decided to go back to France so that he could develop his art in a more comfortable country Numerous other artists writers and musicians were also planning to relocate to the West He applied for an exit visa and while waiting for its uncertain approval wrote his autobiography My Life 15 121 France 1923 1941 In 1923 Chagall left Moscow to return to France On his way he stopped in Berlin to recover the many pictures he had left there on exhibit ten years earlier before the war began but was unable to find or recover any of them Nonetheless after returning to Paris he again rediscovered the free expansion and fulfillment which were so essential to him writes Lewis With all his early works now lost he began trying to paint from his memories of his earliest years in Vitebsk with sketches and oil paintings 9 He formed a business relationship with French art dealer Ambroise Vollard This inspired him to begin creating etchings for a series of illustrated books including Gogol s Dead Souls the Bible and the La Fontaine s Fables These illustrations would eventually come to represent his finest printmaking efforts 9 In 1924 he travelled to Brittany and painted La fenetre sur l Ile de Brehat 33 By 1926 he had his first exhibition in the United States at the Reinhardt gallery of New York which included about 100 works although he did not travel to the opening He instead stayed in France painting ceaselessly notes Baal Teshuva 15 It was not until 1927 that Chagall made his name in the French art world when art critic and historian Maurice Raynal awarded him a place in his book Modern French Painters However Raynal was still at a loss to accurately describe Chagall to his readers Chagall interrogates life in the light of a refined anxious childlike sensibility a slightly romantic temperament a blend of sadness and gaiety characteristic of a grave view of life His imagination his temperament no doubt forbid a Latin severity of composition 10 314 During this period he traveled throughout France and the Cote d Azur where he enjoyed the landscapes colorful vegetation the blue Mediterranean Sea and the mild weather He made repeated trips to the countryside taking his sketchbook 10 9 He also visited nearby countries and later wrote about the impressions some of those travels left on him I should like to recall how advantageous my travels outside France have been for me in an artistic sense in Holland or in Spain Italy Egypt Palestine or simply in the south of France There in the south for the first time in my life I saw that rich greenness the like of which I had never seen in my own country In Holland I thought I discovered that familiar and throbbing light like the light between the late afternoon and dusk In Italy I found that peace of the museums which the sunlight brought to life In Spain I was happy to find the inspiration of a mystical if sometimes cruel past to find the song of its sky and of its people And in the East Palestine I found unexpectedly the Bible and a part of my very being 21 77 The Bible illustrations The Prophet Jeremiah 1968 After returning to Paris from one of his trips Vollard commissioned Chagall to illustrate the Old Testament Although he could have completed the project in France he used the assignment as an excuse to travel to Israel to experience for himself the Holy Land In 1931 Marc Chagall and his family traveled to Tel Aviv on the invitation of Meir Dizengoff Dizengoff had previously encouraged Chagall to visit Tel Aviv in connection with Dizengoff s plan to build a Jewish Art Museum in the new city Chagall and his family were invited to stay at Dizengoff s house in Tel Aviv which later became Independence Hall of the State of Israel Chagall ended up staying in the Holy Land for two months Chagall felt at home in Israel where many people spoke Yiddish and Russian According to Jacob Baal Teshuva he was impressed by the pioneering spirit of the people in the kibbutzim and deeply moved by the Wailing Wall and the other holy places 15 133 Chagall later told a friend that Israel gave him the most vivid impression he had ever received Wullschlager notes however that whereas Delacroix and Matisse had found inspiration in the exoticism of North Africa he as a Jew in Israel had different perspective What he was really searching for there was not external stimulus but an inner authorization from the land of his ancestors to plunge into his work on the Bible illustrations 10 343 Chagall stated that In the East I found the Bible and part of my own being As a result he immersed himself in the history of the Jews their trials prophecies and disasters notes Wullschlager She adds that beginning the assignment was an extraordinary risk for Chagall as he had finally become well known as a leading contemporary painter but would now end his modernist themes and delve into an ancient past 10 350 Between 1931 and 1934 he worked obsessively on The Bible even going to Amsterdam in order to carefully study the biblical paintings of Rembrandt and El Greco to see the extremes of religious painting He walked the streets of the city s Jewish quarter to again feel the earlier atmosphere He told Franz Meyer I did not see the Bible I dreamed it Ever since early childhood I have been captivated by the Bible It has always seemed to me and still seems today the greatest source of poetry of all time 10 350 Chagall saw the Old Testament as a human story not with the creation of the cosmos but with the creation of man and his figures of angels are rhymed or combined with human ones writes Wullschlager She points out that in one of his early Bible images Abraham and the Three Angels the angels sit and chat over a glass of wine as if they have just dropped by for dinner 10 350 He returned to France and by the next year had completed 32 out of the total of 105 plates By 1939 at the beginning of World War II he had finished 66 However Vollard died that same year When the series was completed in 1956 it was published by Edition Teriade Baal Teshuva writes that the illustrations were stunning and met with great acclaim Once again Chagall had shown himself to be one of the 20th century s most important graphic artists 15 135 Leymarie has described these drawings by Chagall as monumental and full of divine inspiration which retrace the legendary destiny and the epic history of Israel to Genesis to the Prophets through the Patriarchs and the Heroes Each picture becomes one with the event informing the text with a solemn intimacy unknown since Rembrandt 28 ix Nazi campaigns against modern art Not long after Chagall began his work on the Bible Adolf Hitler gained power in Germany Anti Semitic laws were being introduced and the first concentration camp at Dachau had been established Wullschlager describes the early effects on art The Nazis had begun their campaign against modernist art as soon as they seized power Expressionist cubist abstract and surrealist art anything intellectual Jewish foreign socialist inspired or difficult to understand was targeted from Picasso and Matisse going back to Cezanne and van Gogh in its place traditional German realism accessible and open to patriotic interpretation was extolled 10 374 Beginning during 1937 about twenty thousand works from German museums were confiscated as degenerate by a committee directed by Joseph Goebbels 10 375 Although the German press had once swooned over him the new German authorities now made a mockery of Chagall s art describing them as green purple and red Jews shooting out of the earth fiddling on violins flying through the air representing an assault on Western civilization 10 376 After Germany invaded and occupied France the Chagalls remained in Vichy France unaware that French Jews with the help of the Vichy government were being collected and sent to German concentration camps from which few would return The Vichy collaborationist government directed by Marshal Philippe Petain immediately upon assuming power established a commission to redefine French citizenship with the aim of stripping undesirables including naturalized citizens of their French nationality Chagall had been so involved with his art that it was not until October 1940 after the Vichy government at the behest of the Nazi occupying forces began approving anti Semitic laws that he began to understand what was happening Learning that Jews were being removed from public and academic positions the Chagalls finally woke up to the danger they faced But Wullschlager notes that by then they were trapped 10 382 Their only refuge could be America but they could not afford the passage to New York or the large bond that each immigrant had to provide upon entry to ensure that they would not become a financial burden to the country Escaping occupied France According to Wullschlager T he speed with which France collapsed astonished everyone the British supported French army capitulated even more quickly than Poland had done a year earlier Shock waves crossed the Atlantic as Paris had until then been equated with civilization throughout the non Nazi world 10 388 Yet the attachment of the Chagalls to France blinded them to the urgency of the situation 10 389 Many other well known Russian and Jewish artists eventually sought to escape these included Chaim Soutine Max Ernst Max Beckmann Ludwig Fulda author Victor Serge and prize winning author Vladimir Nabokov who although not Jewish himself was married to a Jewish woman 34 1181 Russian author Victor Serge described many of the people living temporarily in Marseille who were waiting to emigrate to America Here is a beggar s alley gathering the remnants of revolutions democracies and crushed intellects In our ranks are enough doctors psychologists engineers educationalists poets painters writers musicians economists and public men to vitalize a whole great country 10 392 After prodding by their daughter Ida who perceived the need to act fast 10 388 and with help from Alfred Barr of the New York Museum of Modern Art Chagall was saved by having his name added to the list of prominent artists whose lives were at risk and who the United States should try to extricate Varian Fry the American journalist and Hiram Bingham IV the American Vice Consul in Marseilles ran a rescue operation to smuggle artists and intellectuals out of Europe to the US by providing them with forged visas to the US In April 1941 Chagall and his wife were stripped of their French citizenship The Chagalls stayed in a hotel in Marseille where they were arrested along with other Jews Varian Fry managed to pressure the French police to release him threatening them of scandal 35 Chagall was one of over 2 000 who were rescued by this operation He left France in May 1941 when it was almost too late adds Lewis Picasso and Matisse were also invited to come to America but they decided to remain in France Chagall and Bella arrived in New York on 23 June 1941 the day after Germany invaded the Soviet Union 15 150 Ida and her husband Michel followed on the notorious refugee ship SS Navemar with a large case of Chagall s work 36 A chance post war meeting in a French cafe between Ida and intelligence analyst Konrad Kellen led to Kellen carrying more paintings on his return to the United States 37 United States 1941 1948 Photo portrait of Chagall in 1941 by Carl Van Vechten Even before arriving in the United States in 1941 Chagall was awarded the Carnegie Prize third prize in 1939 for Les Fiances After being in America he discovered that he had already achieved international stature writes Cogniat although he felt ill suited in this new role in a foreign country whose language he could not yet speak He became a celebrity mostly against his will feeling lost in the strange surroundings 24 57 After a while he began to settle in New York which was full of writers painters and composers who like himself had fled from Europe during the Nazi invasions He lived at 4 East 74th Street 38 He spent time visiting galleries and museums and befriended other artists including Piet Mondrian and Andre Breton 15 155 Baal Teshuva writes that Chagall loved going to the sections of New York where Jews lived especially the Lower East Side There he felt at home enjoying the Jewish foods and being able to read the Yiddish press which became his main source of information since he did not yet speak English 15 Contemporary artists did not yet understand or even like Chagall s art According to Baal Teshuva they had little in common with a folkloristic storyteller of Russo Jewish extraction with a propensity for mysticism The Paris School which was referred to as Parisian Surrealism meant little to them 15 155 Those attitudes would begin to change however when Pierre Matisse the son of recognized French artist Henri Matisse became his representative and managed Chagall exhibitions in New York and Chicago in 1941 One of the earliest exhibitions included 21 of his masterpieces from 1910 to 1941 15 Art critic Henry McBride wrote about this exhibit for the New York Sun Chagall is about as gypsy as they come these pictures do more for his reputation than anything we have previously seen His colors sparkle with poetry his work is authentically Russian as a Volga boatman s song 39 Aleko ballet 1942 He was offered a commission by choreographer Leonide Massine of the Ballet Theatre of New York to design the sets and costumes for his new ballet Aleko This ballet would stage the words of Alexander Pushkin s verse narrative The Gypsies with the music of Tchaikovsky The ballet was originally planned for a New York debut but as a cost saving measure it was moved to Mexico where labor costs were cheaper than in New York While Chagall had done stage settings before while in Russia this was his first ballet and it would give him the opportunity to visit Mexico While there he quickly began to appreciate the primitive ways and colorful art of the Mexicans notes Cogniat He found something very closely related to his own nature and did all the color detail for the sets while there 24 Eventually he created four large backdrops and had Mexican seamstresses sew the ballet costumes When the ballet premiered at the Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City on 8 September 1942 it was considered a remarkable success 15 In the audience were other famous mural painters who came to see Chagall s work including Diego Rivera and Jose Clemente Orozco According to Baal Teshuva when the final bar of music ended there was a tumultuous applause and 19 curtain calls with Chagall himself being called back onto the stage again and again The production then moved to New York where it was presented four weeks later at the Metropolitan Opera and the response was repeated again Chagall was the hero of the evening 15 158 Art critic Edwin Denby wrote of the opening for the New York Herald Tribune that Chagall s work has turned into a dramatized exhibition of giant paintings It surpasses anything Chagall has done on the easel scale and it is a breathtaking experience of a kind one hardly expects in the theatre 40 Coming to grips with World War II After Chagall returned to New York in 1943 current events began to interest him more and this was represented by his art where he painted subjects including the Crucifixion and scenes of war He learned that the Germans had destroyed the town where he was raised Vitebsk and became greatly distressed 15 159 He also learned about the Nazi concentration camps 15 During a speech in February 1944 he described some of his feelings Meanwhile the enemy jokes saying that we are a stupid nation He thought that when he started slaughtering the Jews we would all in our grief suddenly raise the greatest prophetic scream and would be joined by the Christian humanists But after two thousand years of Christianity in the world say whatever you like but with few exceptions their hearts are silent I see the artists in Christian nations sit still who has heard them speak up They are not worried about themselves and our Jewish life doesn t concern them 21 89 In the same speech he credited Soviet Russia with doing the most to save the Jews The Jews will always be grateful to it What other great country has saved a million and a half Jews from Hitler s hands and shared its last piece of bread What country abolished antisemitism What other country devoted at least a piece of land as an autonomous region for Jews who want to live there All this and more weighs heavily on the scales of history 21 89 On 2 September 1944 Bella died suddenly due to a virus infection which was not treated due to the wartime shortage of medicine As a result he stopped all work for many months and when he did resume painting his first pictures were concerned with preserving Bella s memory 24 Wullschlager writes of the effect on Chagall As news poured in through 1945 of the ongoing Holocaust at Nazi concentration camps Bella took her place in Chagall s mind with the millions of Jewish victims He even considered the possibility that their exile from Europe had sapped her will to live 10 419 With Virginia Haggard McNeil After a year of living with his daughter Ida and her husband Michel Gordey he entered into a romance with Virginia Haggard daughter of diplomat Sir Godfrey Digby Napier Haggard and great niece of the author Sir Henry Rider Haggard their relationship endured seven years They had a child together David McNeil born 22 June 1946 15 Haggard recalled her seven years of plenty with Chagall in her book My Life with Chagall Robert Hale 1986 A few months after the Allies succeeded in liberating Paris from Nazi occupation with the help of the Allied armies Chagall published a letter in a Paris weekly To the Paris Artists In recent years I have felt unhappy that I couldn t be with you my friends My enemy forced me to take the road of exile On that tragic road I lost my wife the companion of my life the woman who was my inspiration I want to say to my friends in France that she joins me in this greeting she who loved France and French art so faithfully Her last joy was the liberation of Paris Now when Paris is liberated when the art of France is resurrected the whole world too will once and for all be free of the satanic enemies who wanted to annihilate not just the body but also the soul the soul without which there is no life no artistic creativity 21 101 Post war years By 1946 his artwork was becoming more widely recognized The Museum of Modern Art in New York had a large exhibition representing 40 years of his work which gave visitors one of the first complete impressions of the changing nature of his art over the years The war had ended and he began making plans to return to Paris According to Cogniat He found he was even more deeply attached than before not only to the atmosphere of Paris but to the city itself to its houses and its views 24 Chagall summed up his years living in America I lived here in America during the inhuman war in which humanity deserted itself I have seen the rhythm of life I have seen America fighting with Allies the wealth that she has distributed to bring relief to the people who had to suffer the consequences of the war I like America and the Americans people there are frank It is a young country with the qualities and faults of youth It is a delight to love people like that Above all I am impressed by the greatness of this country and the freedom that it gives 15 170 He went back for good during the autumn of 1947 where he attended the opening of the exhibition of his works at the Musee National d Art Moderne 24 France 1948 1985 After returning to France he traveled throughout Europe and chose to live in the Cote d Azur which by that time had become somewhat of an artistic centre Matisse lived near Saint Paul de Vence about seven miles west of Nice while Picasso lived in Vallauris Although they lived nearby and sometimes worked together there was artistic rivalry between them as their work was so distinctly different and they never became long term friends According to Picasso s mistress Francoise Gilot Picasso still had a great deal of respect for Chagall and once told her When Matisse dies Chagall will be the only painter left who understands what color is His canvases are really painted not just tossed together Some of the last things he s done in Vence convince me that there s never been anybody since Renoir who has the feeling for light that Chagall has 41 In April 1952 Virginia Haggard left Chagall for the photographer Charles Leirens she went on to become a professional photographer herself Vava Brodsky and Marc Chagall in 1967 Chagall s daughter Ida married art historian Franz Meyer in January 1952 and feeling that her father missed the companionship of a woman in his home introduced him to Valentina Vava Brodsky a woman from a similar Russian Jewish background who had run a successful millinery business in London She became his secretary and after a few months agreed to stay only if Chagall married her The marriage took place in July 1952 15 183 though six years later when there was conflict between Ida and Vava Marc and Vava divorced and immediately remarried under an agreement more favourable to Vava Jean Paul Crespelle author of Chagall l Amour le Reve et la Vie quoted in Haggard My Life with Chagall In 1954 he was engaged as set decorator for Robert Helpmann s production of Rimsky Korsakov s opera Le Coq d Or at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden but he withdrew The Australian designer Loudon Sainthill was drafted at short notice in his place 42 In the years ahead he was able to produce not just paintings and graphic art but also numerous sculptures and ceramics including wall tiles painted vases plates and jugs He also began working in larger scale formats producing large murals stained glass windows mosaics and tapestries 15 Ceiling of the Paris Opera 1963 In 1963 Chagall was commissioned to paint the new ceiling for the Paris Opera Palais Garnier a majestic 19th century building and national monument Andre Malraux France s Minister of Culture wanted something unique and decided Chagall would be the ideal artist However this choice of artist caused controversy some objected to having a Russian Jew decorate a French national monument others disliked the ceiling of the historic building being painted by a modern artist Some magazines wrote condescending articles about Chagall and Malraux about which Chagall commented to one writer They really had it in for me It is amazing the way the French resent foreigners You live here most of your life You become a naturalized French citizen work for nothing decorating their cathedrals and still they despise you You are not one of them 15 196 Nonetheless Chagall continued the project which took the 77 year old artist a year to complete The final canvas was nearly 2 400 square feet 220 sq meters and required 440 pounds 200 kg of paint It had five sections which were glued to polyester panels and hoisted up to the 70 foot 21 m ceiling The images Chagall painted on the canvas paid tribute to the composers Mozart Wagner Mussorgsky Berlioz and Ravel as well as to famous actors and dancers 15 199 It was presented to the public on 23 September 1964 in the presence of Malraux and 2 100 invited guests The Paris correspondent for the New York Times wrote For once the best seats were in the uppermost circle 15 199 Baal Teshuva writes To begin with the big crystal chandelier hanging from the centre of the ceiling was unlit the entire corps de ballet came onto the stage after which in Chagall s honour the opera s orchestra played the finale of the Jupiter Symphony by Mozart Chagall s favorite composer During the last bars of the music the chandelier lit up bringing the artist s ceiling painting to life in all its glory drawing rapturous applause from the audience 15 199 After the new ceiling was unveiled even the bitterest opponents of the commission seemed to fall silent writes Baal Teshuva Unanimously the press declared Chagall s new work to be a great contribution to French culture Malraux later said What other living artist could have painted the ceiling of the Paris Opera in the way Chagall did He is above all one of the great colourists of our time many of his canvases and the Opera ceiling represent sublime images that rank among the finest poetry of our time just as Titian produced the finest poetry of his day 15 199 In Chagall s speech to the audience he explained the meaning of the work Up there in my painting I wanted to reflect like a mirror in a bouquet the dreams and creations of the singers and musicians to recall the movement of the colourfully attired audience below and to honour the great opera and ballet composers Now I offer this work as a gift of gratitude to France and her Ecole de Paris without which there would be no colour and no freedom 21 151 Art styles and techniquesColor Bestiaire et Musique 1969 According to Cogniat in all Chagall s work during all stages of his life it was his colors which attracted and captured the viewer s attention During his earlier years his range was limited by his emphasis on form and his pictures never gave the impression of painted drawings He adds The colors are a living integral part of the picture and are never passively flat or banal like an afterthought They sculpt and animate the volume of the shapes they indulge in flights of fancy and invention which add new perspectives and graduated blended tones His colors do not even attempt to imitate nature but rather to suggest movements planes and rhythms 24 He was able to convey striking images using only two or three colors Cogniat writes Chagall is unrivalled in this ability to give a vivid impression of explosive movement with the simplest use of colors Throughout his life his colors created a vibrant atmosphere which was based on his own personal vision 24 60 Subject matter From life memories to fantasy Chagall s early life left him with a powerful visual memory and a pictorial intelligence writes Goodman After living in France and experiencing the atmosphere of artistic freedom his vision soared and he created a new reality one that drew on both his inner and outer worlds But it was the images and memories of his early years in Belarus that would sustain his art for more than 70 years 16 13 The Circus Horse According to Cogniat there are certain elements in his art that have remained permanent and seen throughout his career One of those was his choice of subjects and the way they were portrayed The most obviously constant element is his gift for happiness and his instinctive compassion which even in the most serious subjects prevents him from dramatization 24 89 Musicians have been a constant during all stages of his work After he first got married lovers have sought each other embraced caressed floated through the air met in wreaths of flowers stretched and swooped like the melodious passage of their vivid day dreams Acrobats contort themselves with the grace of exotic flowers on the end of their stems flowers and foliage abound everywhere 24 Wullschlager explains the sources for these images For him clowns and acrobats always resembled figures in religious paintings The evolution of the circus works reflects a gradual clouding of his worldview and the circus performers now gave way to the prophet or sage in his work a figure into whom Chagall poured his anxiety as Europe darkened and he could no longer rely on the lumiere liberte of France for inspiration 10 337 Chagall described his love of circus people Why am I so touched by their makeup and grimaces With them I can move toward new horizons Chaplin seeks to do in film what I am trying to do in my paintings He is perhaps the only artist today I could get along with without having to say a single word 10 337 His early pictures were often of the town where he was born and raised Vitebsk Cogniat notes that they are realistic and give the impression of firsthand experience by capturing a moment in time with action often with a dramatic image During his later years as for instance in the Bible series subjects were more dramatic He managed to blend the real with the fantastic and combined with his use of color the pictures were always at least acceptable if not powerful He never attempted to present pure reality but always created his atmospheres through fantasy 24 91 In all cases Chagall s most persistent subject is life itself in its simplicity or its hidden complexity He presents for our study places people and objects from his own life Jewish themes After absorbing the techniques of Fauvism and Cubism under the influence of Jean Metzinger and Albert Gleizes 43 Chagall was able to blend these stylistic tendencies with his own folkish style He gave the grim life of Hasidic Jews the romantic overtones of a charmed world notes Goodman It was by combining the aspects of Modernism with his unique artistic language that he was able to catch the attention of critics and collectors throughout Europe Generally it was his boyhood of living in a Belarusian provincial town that gave him a continual source of imaginative stimuli Chagall would become one of many Jewish emigres who later became noted artists all of them similarly having once been part of Russia s most numerous and creative minorities notes Goodman 16 13 World War I which ended in 1918 had displaced nearly a million Jews and destroyed what remained of the provincial shtetl culture that had defined life for most Eastern European Jews for centuries Goodman notes The fading of traditional Jewish society left artists like Chagall with powerful memories that could no longer be fed by a tangible reality Instead that culture became an emotional and intellectual source that existed solely in memory and the imagination So rich had the experience been it sustained him for the rest of his life 16 15 Sweeney adds that if you ask Chagall to explain his paintings he would reply I don t understand them at all They are not literature They are only pictorial arrangements of images that obsess me 27 7 In 1948 after returning to France from the U S after the war he saw for himself the destruction that the war had brought to Europe and the Jewish populations In 1951 as part of a memorial book dedicated to eighty four Jewish artists who were killed by the Nazis in France he wrote a poem entitled For the Slaughtered Artists 1950 which inspired paintings such as the Song of David see photo I see the fire the smoke and the gas rising to the blue cloud turning it black I see the torn out hair the pulled out teeth They overwhelm me with my rabid palette I stand in the desert before heaps of boots clothing ash and dung and mumble my Kaddish And as I stand from my paintings the painted David descends to me harp in hand He wants to help me weep and recite chapters of Psalms 21 114 115 Lewis writes that Chagall remains the most important visual artist to have borne witness to the world of East European Jewry and inadvertently became the public witness of a now vanished civilization 9 Although Judaism has religious inhibitions about pictorial art of many religious subjects Chagall managed to use his fantasy images as a form of visual metaphor combined with folk imagery His Fiddler on the Roof for example combines a folksy village setting with a fiddler as a way to show the Jewish love of music as important to the Jewish spirit Music played an important role in shaping the subjects of his work While he later came to love the music of Bach and Mozart during his youth he was mostly influenced by the music within the Hasidic community where he was raised 44 Art historian Franz Meyer points out that one of the main reasons for the unconventional nature of his work is related to the hassidism which inspired the world of his childhood and youth and had actually impressed itself on most Eastern European Jews since the 18th century He writes For Chagall this is one of the deepest sources not of inspiration but of a certain spiritual attitude the hassidic spirit is still the basis and source of nourishment of his art 24 24 In a talk that Chagall gave in 1963 while visiting America he discussed some of those impressions However Chagall had a complex relationship with Judaism On the one hand he credited his Russian Jewish cultural background as being crucial to his artistic imagination But however ambivalent he was about his religion he could not avoid drawing upon his Jewish past for artistic material As an adult he was not a practicing Jew but through his paintings and stained glass he continually tried to suggest a more universal message using both Jewish and Christian themes 45 For about two thousand years a reserve of energy has fed and supported us and filled our lives but during the last century a split has opened in this reserve and its components have begun to disintegrate God perspective colour the Bible shape line traditions the so called humanities love devotion family school education the prophets and Christ himself Have I too perhaps doubted in my time I painted pictures upside down decapitated people and dissected them scattering the pieces in the air all in the name of another perspective another kind of picture composition and another formalism 24 29 He was also at pains to distance his work from a single Jewish focus At the opening of The Chagall Museum in Nice he said My painting represents not the dream of one people but of all humanity Other types of artStained glass windows One of Chagall s major contributions to art has been his work with stained glass This medium allowed him further to express his desire to create intense and fresh colors and had the added benefit of natural light and refraction interacting and constantly changing everything from the position where the viewer stood to the weather outside would alter the visual effect though this is not the case with his Hadassah windows It was not until 1956 when he was nearly 70 years of age that he designed windows for the church at Assy his first major project Then from 1958 to 1960 he created windows for Metz Cathedral Jerusalem Windows 1962 In 1960 he began creating stained glass windows for the synagogue of Hebrew University s Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem Leymarie writes that in order to illuminate the synagogue both spiritually and physically it was decided that the twelve windows representing the twelve tribes of Israel were to be filled with stained glass Chagall envisaged the synagogue as a crown offered to the Jewish Queen and the windows as jewels of translucent fire she writes Chagall then devoted the next two years to the task and upon completion in 1961 the windows were exhibited in Paris and then the Museum of Modern Art in New York They were installed permanently in Jerusalem in February 1962 Each of the twelve windows is approximately 11 feet high and 8 feet 2 4 m wide much larger than anything he had done before Cogniat considers them to be his greatest work in the field of stained glass although Virginia Haggard McNeil records Chagall s disappointment that they were to be lit with artificial light and so would not change according to the conditions of natural light Peace 1964 a stained glass memorial at the United Nations New York French philosopher Gaston Bachelard commented that Chagall reads the Bible and suddenly the passages become light 28 xii In 1973 Israel released a 12 stamp set with images of the stained glass windows 46 The windows symbolize the twelve tribes of Israel who were blessed by Jacob and Moses in the verses which conclude Genesis and Deuteronomy In those books notes Leymarie The dying Moses repeated Jacob s solemn act and in a somewhat different order also blessed the twelve tribes of Israel who were about to enter the land of Canaan In the synagogue where the windows are distributed in the same way the tribes form a symbolic guard of honor around the tabernacle 28 xii Leymarie describes the physical and spiritual significance of the windows The essence of the Jerusalem Windows lies in color in Chagall s magical ability to animate material and transform it into light Words do not have the power to describe Chagall s color its spirituality its singing quality its dazzling luminosity its ever more subtle flow and its sensitivity to the inflections of the soul and the transports of the imagination It is simultaneously jewel hard and foamy reverberating and penetrating radiating light from an unknown interior 28 xii At the dedication ceremony in 1962 Chagall described his feelings about the windows For me a stained glass window is a transparent partition between my heart and the heart of the world Stained glass has to be serious and passionate It is something elevating and exhilarating It has to live through the perception of light To read the Bible is to perceive a certain light and the window has to make this obvious through its simplicity and grace The thoughts have nested in me for many years since the time when my feet walked on the Holy Land when I prepared myself to create engravings of the Bible They strengthened me and encouraged me to bring my modest gift to the Jewish people that people that lived here thousands of years ago among the other Semitic peoples 21 145 146 Peace United Nations building 1964 In 1964 Chagall created a stained glass window entitled Peace for the UN in honor of Dag Hammarskjold the UN s second secretary general who was killed in an airplane crash in Africa in 1961 The window is about 15 feet 4 6 m wide and 12 feet 3 7 m high and contains symbols of peace and love along with musical symbols 47 In 1967 he dedicated a stained glass window to John D Rockefeller in the Union Church of Pocantico Hills New York Fraumunster in Zurich Switzerland 1967 The Fraumunster church in Zurich Switzerland founded in 853 is known for its five large stained glass windows created by Chagall in 1967 Each window is 32 feet 9 8 m tall by 3 feet 0 91 m wide Religion historian James H Charlesworth notes that it is surprising how Christian symbols are featured in the works of an artist who comes from a strict and Orthodox Jewish background He surmises that Chagall as a result of his Russian background often used Russian icons in his paintings with their interpretations of Christian symbols He explains that his chosen themes were usually derived from biblical stories and frequently portrayed the obedience and suffering of God s chosen people One of the panels depicts Moses receiving the Torah with rays of light from his head At the top of another panel is a depiction of Jesus crucifixion 48 49 St Stephan s church in Mainz Germany 1978 In 1978 he began creating windows for St Stephan s church in Mainz Germany Today 200 000 visitors a year visit the church and tourists from the whole world pilgrim up St Stephan s Mount to see the glowing blue stained glass windows by the artist Marc Chagall states the city s web site St Stephan s is the only German church for which Chagall has created windows 50 The website also notes The colours address our vital consciousness directly because they tell of optimism hope and delight in life says Monsignor Klaus Mayer who imparts Chagall s work in mediations and books He corresponded with Chagall during 1973 and succeeded in persuading the master of colour and the biblical message to create a sign for Jewish Christian attachment and international understanding Centuries earlier Mainz had been the capital of European Jewry and contained the largest Jewish community in Europe notes historian John Man 51 16 52 In 1978 at the age of 91 Chagall created the first window and eight more followed Chagall s collaborator Charles Marq complemented Chagall s work by adding several stained glass windows using the typical colors of Chagall All Saints Church Tudeley UK 1963 1978 All Saints Church Tudeley is the only church in the world to have all its twelve windows decorated by Chagall 53 The other three religious buildings with complete sets of Chagall windows are the Hadassah Medical Center synagogue the Chapel of Le Saillant Limousin and the Union Church of Pocantico Hills New York 54 The windows at Tudeley were commissioned by Sir Henry and Lady Rosemary d Avigdor Goldsmid as a memorial tribute to their daughter Sarah who died in 1963 aged 21 in a sailing accident off Rye When Chagall arrived for the dedication of the east window in 1967 and saw the church for the first time he exclaimed C est magnifique Je les ferai tous It s beautiful I will do them all Over the next ten years Chagall designed the remaining eleven windows made again in collaboration with the glassworker Charles Marq in his workshop at Reims in northern France The last windows were installed in 1985 just before Chagall s death Chichester Cathedral West Sussex UK On the north side of Chichester Cathedral there is a stained glass window designed and created by Chagall at the age of 90 The window his last commissioned work was inspired by Psalm 150 Let everything that hath breath praise the Lord at the suggestion of Dean Walter Hussey 55 The window was unveiled by the Duchess of Kent in 1978 56 America Windows Chicago Chagall visited Chicago in the early 1970s to install his mural The Four Seasons and at that time was inspired to create a set of stained glass windows for the Art Institute of Chicago 57 After discussions with the Art Institute and further reflection Chagall made the windows a tribute to the American Bicentennial and in particular the commitment of the United States to cultural and religious freedom 57 The windows appeared prominently in the 1986 movie Ferris Bueller s Day Off 58 From 2005 to 2010 the windows were moved due to nearby construction on a new wing of the Art Institute and for archival cleaning 57 Murals theatre sets and costumes Chagall first worked on stage designs in 1914 while living in Russia under the inspiration of the theatrical designer and artist Leon Bakst 59 It was during this period in the Russian theatre that formerly static ideas of stage design were according to Cogniat being swept away in favor of a wholly arbitrary sense of space with different dimensions perspectives colors and rhythms 24 66 These changes appealed to Chagall who had been experimenting with Cubism and wanted a way to enliven his images Designing murals and stage designs Chagall s dreams sprang to life and became an actual movement 24 As a result Chagall played an important role in Russian artistic life during that time and was one of the most important forces in the current urge towards anti realism which helped the new Russia invent astonishing creations Many of his designs were done for the Jewish Theatre in Moscow which put on numerous Jewish plays by playwrights such as Gogol and Singe Chagall s set designs helped create illusory atmospheres which became the essence of the theatrical performances 60 After leaving Russia twenty years passed before he was again offered a chance to design theatre sets In the years between his paintings still included harlequins clowns and acrobats which Cogniat notes convey his sentimental attachment to and nostalgia for the theatre 24 His first assignment designing sets after Russia was for the ballet Aleko in 1942 while living in America In 1945 he was also commissioned to design the sets and costumes for Stravinsky s Firebird These designs contributed greatly towards his enhanced reputation in America as a major artist and as of 2013 are still in use by New York City Ballet Cogniat describes how Chagall s designs immerse the spectator in a luminous colored fairy land where forms are mistily defined and the spaces themselves seem animated with whirlwinds or explosions 24 His technique of using theatrical color in this way reached its peak when Chagall returned to Paris and designed the sets for Ravel s Daphnis and Chloe in 1958 In 1964 he repainted the ceiling of the Paris Opera using 2 400 square feet 220 m2 of canvas He painted two monumental murals which hang on opposite sides of the new Metropolitan Opera house at Lincoln Center in New York which opened in 1966 The pieces The Sources of Music and The Triumph of Music which hang from the top most balcony level and extend down to the Grand Tier lobby level were completed in France and shipped to New York and are covered by a system of panels during the hours in which the opera house receives direct sunlight to prevent fading He also designed the sets and costumes for a new production of Die Zauberflote for the company which opened in February 1967 61 and was used through the 1981 1982 season Tapestries Ceramic plate titled Moses Chagall Art Centre in Vitebsk Belarus Chagall also designed tapestries which were woven under the direction of Yvette Cauquil Prince who also collaborated with Picasso These tapestries are much rarer than his paintings with only 40 of them ever reaching the commercial market 62 Chagall designed three tapestries for the state hall of the Knesset in Israel along with 12 floor mosaics and a wall mosaic 63 Ceramics and sculpture Chagall began learning about ceramics and sculpture while living in south France Ceramics became a fashion in the Cote d Azur with various workshops starting up at Antibes Vence and Vallauris He took classes along with other known artists including Picasso and Fernand Leger At first Chagall painted existing pieces of pottery but soon expanded into designing his own which began his work as a sculptor as a complement to his painting After experimenting with pottery and dishes he moved into large ceramic murals However he was never satisfied with the limits imposed by the square tile segments which Cogniat notes imposed on him a discipline which prevented the creation of a plastic image 24 76 Final years and deathAuthor Serena Davies writes that By the time he died in France in 1985 the last surviving master of European modernism outliving Joan Miro by two years he had experienced at first hand the high hopes and crushing disappointments of the Russian revolution and had witnessed the end of the Pale of Settlement the near annihilation of European Jewry and the obliteration of Vitebsk his home town where only 118 of a population of 240 000 survived the Second World War 64 Chagall s final work was a commissioned piece of art for the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago The maquette painting titled Job had been completed but Chagall died just before the completion of the tapestry 65 Yvette Cauquil Prince was weaving the tapestry under Chagall s supervision and was the last person to work with Chagall She left Vava and Marc Chagall s home at 4 pm on 28 March after discussing and matching the final colors from the maquette painting for the tapestry He died that evening 66 His relationship with his Jewish identity was unresolved and tragic Davies states He would have died without Jewish rites had not a Jewish stranger stepped forward and said the kaddish the Jewish prayer for the dead over his coffin 64 Chagall is buried alongside his last wife Valentina Vava Brodsky Chagall in the multi denominational cemetery in the traditional artists town of Saint Paul de Vence in the French region of Provence Gallery Marc Chagall 1911 To My Betrothed gouache watercolor metallic paint charcoal and ink on paper mounted on cardboard 61 44 5 cm Philadelphia Museum of Art Marc Chagall 1911 I and the Village oil on canvas 192 1 151 4 cm Museum of Modern Art New York Marc Chagall 1911 A la Russie aux anes et aux autres To Russia Asses and Others oil on canvas 157 x 122 cm Musee National d Art Moderne Centre Pompidou Paris Marc Chagall 1911 Trois heures et demie Le poete Half Past Three The Poet Halb vier Uhr oil on canvas 195 9 144 8 cm The Louise and Walter Arensberg Collection 1950 Philadelphia Museum of Art Marc Chagall 1911 12 Hommage a Apollinaire or Adam et Eve study gouache watercolor ink wash pen and ink and collage on paper 21 17 5 cm Marc Chagall 1911 12 Le saint voiturier The Holy Coachman oil on canvas 148 x 117 5 cm private collection Marc Chagall 1913 Paris par la fenetre Paris Through the Window oil on canvas 136 141 9 cm Solomon R Guggenheim Museum New York Marc Chagall 1913 La femme enceinte Maternite oil on canvas 193 116 cm Stedelijk Museum AmsterdamLegacy and influenceChagall biographer Jackie Wullschlager praises him as a pioneer of modern art and one of its greatest figurative painters who invented a visual language that recorded the thrill and terror of the twentieth century 10 She adds On his canvases we read the triumph of modernism the breakthrough in art to an expression of inner life that is one of the last century s signal legacies At the same time Chagall was personally swept up in the horrors of European history between 1914 and 1945 world wars revolution ethnic persecution the murder and exile of millions In an age when many major artists fled reality for abstraction he distilled his experiences of suffering and tragedy into images at once immediate simple and symbolic to which everyone could respond 10 4 Art historians Ingo Walther and Rainer Metzger refer to Chagall as a poet dreamer and exotic apparition They add that throughout his long life the role of outsider and artistic eccentric came naturally to him as he seemed to be a kind of intermediary between worlds as a Jew with a lordly disdain for the ancient ban on image making as a Russian who went beyond the realm of familiar self sufficiency or the son of poor parents growing up in a large and needy family Yet he went on to establish himself in the sophisticated world of elegant artistic salons 67 7 Through his imagination and strong memories Chagall was able to use typical motifs and subjects in most of his work village scenes peasant life and intimate views of the small world of the Jewish village shtetl His tranquil figures and simple gestures helped produce a monumental sense of dignity by translating everyday Jewish rituals into a timeless realm of iconic peacefulness 67 8 Leymarie writes that Chagall transcended the limits of his century He has unveiled possibilities unsuspected by an art that had lost touch with the Bible and in doing so he has achieved a wholly new synthesis of Jewish culture long ignored by painting He adds that although Chagall s art cannot be confined to religion his most moving and original contributions what he called his message are those drawn from religious or more precisely Biblical sources 28 x Walther and Metzger try to summarize Chagall s contribution to art His life and art together added up to this image of a lonesome visionary a citizen of the world with much of the child still in him a stranger lost in wonder an image which the artist did everything to cultivate Profoundly religious and with a deep love of the homeland his work is arguably the most urgent appeal for tolerance and respect of all that is different that modern times could make 67 7 Andre Malraux praised him He said Chagall is the greatest image maker of this century He has looked at our world with the light of freedom and seen it with the colours of love 68 Art market A 1928 Chagall oil painting Les Amoureux measuring 117 3 x 90 5 cm depicting Bella Rosenfeld the artist s first wife and adopted home Paris sold for 28 5 million with fees at Sotheby s New York 14 November 2017 almost doubling Chagall s 27 year old 14 85 million auction record 69 70 In October 2010 his painting Bestiaire et Musique depicting a bride and a fiddler floating in a night sky amid circus performers and animals was the star lot at an auction in Hong Kong When it sold for 4 1 million it became the most expensive contemporary Western painting ever sold in Asia 71 In 2013 previously unknown works by Chagall were discovered in the stash of artworks hidden away by the son of one of Hitler s art dealers Hildebrand Gurlitt 72 TheatreIn the 1990s Daniel Jamieson wrote The Flying Lovers of Vitebsk a play concerning the life of Chagall and partner Bella It has been revived multiple times most recently in 2020 with Emma Rice directing a production which was live streamed from the Bristol Old Vic and then made available for on demand viewing in partnership with theaters around the world 73 This production had Marc Antolin in the role of Chagall and Audrey Brisson playing Bella Chagall produced during the COVID epidemic it required the entire crew to quarantine together to make the live performance and broadcast possible 74 Exhibitions and tributes Bust of Marc Chagall in Celebrity Alley in Kielce Poland During his lifetime Chagall received several honors In 1960 Brandeis University awarded Marc Chagall an honorary degree in Laws at its 9th Commencement In 1977 the city of Jerusalem bestowed upon him the Yakir Yerushalayim Worthy Citizen of Jerusalem award 75 Also in 1977 the government of France awarded him its highest honour the Grand Croix de la Legion d honneur 1974 Member of the Royal Academy of Science Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium 76 1963 documentaryChagall a short 1963 documentary features Chagall It won the 1964 Academy Award for Best Short Subject Documentary Postage stamp tributesBecause of the international acclaim he enjoyed and the popularity of his art a number of countries have issued commemorative stamps in his honor depicting examples from his works In 1963 France issued a stamp of his painting The Married Couple of the Eiffel Tower In 1969 Israel produced a stamp depicting his King David painting In 1973 Israel released a 12 stamp set with images of the stained glass windows that he created for the Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center Synagogue each window was made to signify one of the Twelve Tribes of Israel 46 In 1987 as a tribute to recognize the centennial of his birth in Belarus seven nations engaged in a special omnibus program and released postage stamps in his honor The countries which issued the stamps included Antigua amp Barbuda Dominica The Gambia Ghana Sierra Leone and Grenada which together produced 48 stamps and 10 souvenir sheets Although the stamps all portray his various masterpieces the names of the artwork are not listed on the stamps 46 ExhibitionsThere were also several major exhibitions of Chagall s work during his lifetime and following his death In 1967 the Louvre in Paris exhibited 17 large scale paintings and 38 gouaches under the title of Message Biblique which he donated to the nation of France on condition that a museum was to be built for them in Nice 15 201 In 1969 work began on the museum named Musee National Message Biblique Marc Chagall It was completed and inaugurated on 7 July 1973 on Chagall s birthday Today it contains monumental paintings on biblical themes three stained glass windows tapestries a large mosaic and numerous gouaches for the Bible series 15 208 From 1969 to 1970 the Grand Palais in Paris held the largest Chagall exhibition to date including 474 works The exhibition was called Hommage a Marc Chagall was opened by the French President and proved an enormous success with the public and critics alike 15 The Dynamic Museum in Dakar Senegal held an exhibition of his work in 1971 77 In 1973 he traveled to the Soviet Union his first visit back since he left in 1922 The Tretiakov Gallery in Moscow had a special exhibition for the occasion of his visit He was able to see again the murals he long ago made for the Jewish Theatre In St Petersburg he was reunited with two of his sisters whom he had not seen for more than 50 years In 1982 the Moderna Museet in Stockholm Sweden organized a retrospective exhibition which later traveled to Denmark In 1985 the Royal Academy in London presented a major retrospective which later traveled to Philadelphia Chagall was too old to attend the London opening and died a few months later In 2003 a major retrospective of Chagall s career was organized by the Reunion des Musees Nationaux Paris in conjunction with the Musee National Message Biblique Marc Chagall Nice and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art In 2007 an exhibition of his work titled Chagall of Miracles was held at Il Complesso del Vittoriano in Rome Italy The regional art museum in Novosibirsk had a Chagall exhibition on his biblical subjects 78 between 16 June 2010 and 29 August 2010 The Musee d art et d histoire du judaisme in Paris had a Chagall exhibition titled Chagall and the Bible in 2011 The Luxembourg Museum in Paris held a Chagall retrospective in 2013 79 The Jewish Museum in New York City has held multiple exhibitions on Chagall including the 2001 exhibit Marc Chagall Early Works from Russian Collections 80 and the exhibit 2013 Chagall Love War and Exhile 81 Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt World in Turmoil with paintings from the 1930s and 1940s between 4 November 2022 to 19 February 2023 82 Current exhibitions and permanent displays Montreal Museum of Fine Arts Musee des Beaux Arts de Montreal 28 January 11 June 2017 Chagall Colour and Music is the biggest Canadian exhibition ever devoted to Marc Chagall Stained glass windows in Reims Cathedral 1974 Chagall s work is housed in a variety of locations including the Palais Garnier the Opera de Paris the Art Institute of Chicago Chase Tower Plaza of downtown Chicago the Metropolitan Opera the Metz Cathedral Notre Dame de Reims the Fraumunster abbey in Zurich Switzerland the Church of St Stephan in Mainz Germany and the Musee Marc Chagall Nice France which Chagall helped to design The only church in the world with a complete set of Chagall window glass is located in the tiny village of Tudeley in Kent England Twelve stained glass windows are part of Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem in Jerusalem Israel Each frame depicts a different tribe In the United States the Union Church of Pocantico Hills contains a set of Chagall windows commemorating the prophets which was commissioned by John D Rockefeller Jr 83 Lincoln Center in New York City contains Chagall s huge murals The Sources of Music and The Triumph of Music are installed in the lobby of the new Metropolitan Opera House which began operation in 1966 Also in New York the United Nations Secretariat Building has a stained glass wall of his work In 1967 the UN commemorated this artwork with a postage stamp and souvenir sheet 47 The family home on Pokrovskaya Street Vitebsk is now the Marc Chagall Museum 78 84 The Museum of Biblical Art Dallas Texas 85 has one of the largest collections of Chagall works on paper hosting continuously holding rotating Chagall exhibitions The Marc Chagall Yufuin Kinrin ko Museum in Yufuin Kyushu Japan holds about 40 50 of his works 86 Marc Chagall s late painting titled Job for the Job Tapestry in Chicago Other tributesDuring the closing ceremony of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi a Chagall like float with clouds and dancers passed by upside down hovering above 130 costumed dancers 40 stilt walkers and a violinist playing folk music 87 88 See alsoApocalypse in Lilac Capriccio I and the Village La Mariee The Bride Soleil dans le ciel de Saint Paul Sun in the sky of Saint Paul Bouquet pres de la fenetre Bouquet by the Window List of Russian artists List of FreemasonsNotes UK ʃ ae ˈ ɡ ae l sha GAL 5 US ʃ e ˈ ɡ ɑː l ʃ e ˈ ɡ ae l she GA H L 6 7 French maʁk ʃaɡal Yiddish מא רק זא כא רא וויטש שא גא ל Russian Mark Zaha rovich Shaga l ˈmark ʂɐˈɡal Belarusian Mark Zaharavich Shagal ˈmark ʂaˈɣal Most sources uncritically repeat the information that he was born on 7 July 1887 without specifying whether this was a Gregorian or Julian date However this date is incorrect He was born on 24 June 1887 under the then Julian calendar which translates to 6 July 1887 in the Gregorian calendar the gap between the calendars in 1887 being 12 days Chagall himself miscalculated the Gregorian date when he arrived in Paris in 1910 using the then current 13 day gap not realising that this applied to births that occurred only from 1900 onwards For further details see Marc Chagall and His Times A Documentary Narrative p 65 References a b c Benjamin Harshav Chagall Marc The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe a b Harshav Benjamin Marc Chagall and his times a documentary narrative Contraversions Jews and Other Differences 1st ed Stanford University Press August 2003 ISBN 0804742146 Polonsky Gill Chagall Phaidon 1998 p 25 Haggard Leirens Virginia 1987 Sieben Jahre der Fulle Leben mit Chagall in German Zurich Diana ISBN 3 905414 48 1 OCLC 26998475 Chagall Marc Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press dead link Chagall Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 27 July 2019 Chagall Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 27 July 2019 McAloon Jonathan 28 June 2018 Marc Chagall s Jewish Identity Was Crucial to His Best Work Artsy Retrieved 12 March 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l Lewis Michael J Whatever Happened to Marc Chagall Commentary October 2008 pp 36 37 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Wullschlager Jackie Chagall A Biography Knopf 2008 Harshav Benjamin Chagall Marc Harshav Barbara 2004 Binyamin Harsav Marc Chagall Barbara Harshav Marc Chagall and his times a documentary narrative ISBN 9780804742146 Retrieved 15 March 2012 Wullschlager Jackie 27 November 2008 Chagall The New York Times Segal org Segal org 22 May 2005 Retrieved 15 March 2012 a b Chagall Marc My Life Orion Press 1960 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al Baal Teshuva Jacob Marc Chagall Taschen 1998 2008 a b c d e f Goodman Susan Tumarkin Marc Chagall Early Works From Russian Collections Third Millennium Publ 2001 Meisler Stanley 14 April 2015 Shocking Paris Soutine Chagall and the Outsiders of Montparnasse St Martin s Press p 69 ISBN 978 1466879270 a b c d Moynahan 1992 p 129 a b c Marc Chagall Elinslated Abbott Marc Chagall My Life The Orion Press 1960 Meyer Franz Marc Chagall L œuvre grave Paris 1957 a b c d e f g h Chagall Marc Marc Chagall on Art and Culture editor Benjamin Harshav Stanford Univ Press 2003 Noteworthy members of the Grand Orient of France in Russia and the Supreme Council of the Grand Orient of Russia s People Grand Lodge of British Columbia and Yukon 15 October 2017 The inflated stardom of a Russian artist IHT 15 16 November 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Cogniat Raymond Chagall Crown Publishers Inc 1978 Michalska Magda 17 February 2018 The Flying Lovers Bella and Marc Chagall DailyArtMagazine com Art History Stories Retrieved 7 May 2020 Several of Chagall s paintings inspired the musical contrary to popular belief the title of the musical does not refer to any specific painting Wecker Menachem Marc Chagall The French painter who inspired the title Fiddler on the Roof The Washington Post 24 October 2014 a b c d Sweeney James J Marc Chagall The Museum of Modern Art 1946 1969 a b c d e f g Leymarie Jean The Jerusalem Windows George Braziller 1967 Marc Chagall Russian French artist Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 22 August 2017 The Magician World Digital Library 1917 Retrieved 30 September 2013 a b Moynahan 1992 p 334 Heroes Trailblazers of the Jewish People Beit Hatfutsot Marc Chagall at Vereinigung Zurcher Kunstfreunde Kunsthaus ch 30 June 2008 Archived from the original on 23 March 2012 Retrieved 15 March 2012 Shrayer Maxim An anthology of Jewish Russian literature vol 1 M E Sharpe 2007 Harshav Benjamin 2004 Marc Chagall and His Times A Documentary Narrative Stanford University Press p 497 El Museo de arte Thyssen Bornemisza Paseo del Prado 8 Madrid Espana Museothyssen org Archived from the original on 12 March 2012 Retrieved 15 March 2012 Viewpoint Could one man have shortened the Vietnam War BBC News 8 July 2013 Retrieved 9 July 2013 Tracie Rozhon 16 November 2000 BIG DEAL An Old Chagall Haunt Repainted The New York Times Retrieved 10 April 2013 McBride Henry New York Sun 28 Nov 1941 Denby Edwin New York Herald Tribune 6 Oct 1942 Gilot Francoise Life with Picasso Anchor Books 1989 p 282 Australian Dictionary of Biography Loudon Sainthill Retrieved 3 September 2013 Cooper Douglas 1970 The Cubist Epoch London Phaidon in association with the Los Angeles County Museum of Art amp the Metropolitan Museum of Art How music influenced the art of Marc Chagall CBS News 7 May 2017 Slater Elinor and Robert Great Jewish Men 1996 Jonathan David Publ Inc pp 84 87 a b c Stamps A Tribute of Seven Nations Marks the Chagall Centennial New York Times 8 February 1987 a b Chagall Stained Glass United Nations Cyber School Bus United Nations UN org 2001 Archived 28 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 4 August 2007 Charlesworth James H The Good and Evil Serpent How a Universal Symbol Became Christianized Yale Univ Press 2010 pp 421 422 Photo of stained glass Archived 8 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine at Fraumunster cathedral Zurich Switzerland St Stephan s Chagall s mysticism of blue light City of Mainz website Archived 10 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Man John The Gutenberg Revolution 2002 Headline Book Publishing Jewish Life and Times in Medieval Mainz Archived 10 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine City of Mainz website All Saints Church Tudeley Archived from the original on 7 December 2009 Retrieved 18 December 2009 Union Church of Pocantico Hills Historic Hudson Valley Retrieved 20 January 2021 Chagall Glass at Chichester and Tudeley Paul Foster ed published by University College Chichester ISBN 0 948765 78 X Susan Gillingham Jewish and Christian Approaches to the Psalms Conflict and Convergence Oxford University Press USA 2013 ISBN 9780199699544 p 113 a b c Art Institute of Chicago Chagall s America Windows The History Blog Chagall s America Windows return to Chicago Art Institute Penny L Remsen Chagall Marc in Thomas J Mikotowicz Theatrical designers and International Biographic Dictionary New York Greenwood 1992 ISBN 0313262705 Susan Goodman with essays by Zvi Gitelman Vladislav Ivanov Jeffrey Veidlinger and Benjamin Harshav 2008 Chagall and the Artists of the Russian Jewish Theater Yale University Press ISBN 9780300111552 Retrieved 15 March 2012 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Opera Flowery Flute Time 3 March 1967 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 17 December 2022 Moscow faf com Moscow faf com Archived from the original on 12 March 2012 Retrieved 15 March 2012 The Knesset The Chagall State Hall Jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved 15 March 2012 a b Davies Serena Chagall Love and Exile by Jackie Wullschlager review dead link UK Daily Telegraph 11 October 2008 Marc Chagall Brings a Message of Hope and Faith to the Disabled Archived 5 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine Marc Chagall tapestry Chicago Tribune a b c Walther Ingo F Metzger Rainer Marc Chagall 1887 1985 Painting as Poetry Taschen 2000 Nonfiction Book Review Chagall A Retrospective by Jacob Baal Teshuva Editor Hugh Lauter Levin Associates 75 0p ISBN 978 0 88363 495 0 PublishersWeekly com September 1996 Retrieved 20 January 2021 Will This Rare Marc Chagall Painting Break a 27 Year Old Auction Record artnet News 4 October 2017 Retrieved 20 January 2021 AFP Chagall sets auction record at 28 5m in New York www timesofisrael com Retrieved 20 January 2021 4 million Chagall painting sets new Asian record Economic Times 5 October 2010 Bryony Jones 5 November 2013 Unknown Matisse Chagall and Dix artworks found in Nazi looted haul CNN Retrieved 12 March 2021 The Flying Lovers of Vitebsk comes to The Wallis The Stage Retrieved 16 May 2019 Halliburton Rachel The Flying Lovers of Vitebsk Bristol Old Vic Kneehigh Wise Children online review ravishing vision of Chagall s early life www kneehigh co uk Retrieved 16 May 2019 Recipients of Yakir Yerushalayim award in Hebrew Archived from the original on 17 June 2011 City of Jerusalem official website Index biographique des membres et associes de l Academie royale de Belgique 1769 2005 Le musee dynamique de Dakar histoire et perspectives Beaux arts Nantes beauxartsnantes fr Retrieved 13 February 2020 a b Museum nsk ru Museum nsk ru Archived from the original on 25 January 2012 Retrieved 15 March 2012 Chagall Between War and Peace 21 February 2013 21 July 2013 Archived 9 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine Marc Chagall Early Works from Russian Collections The Jewish Museum Retrieved 4 April 2017 Chagall Love War and Exile The Jewish Museum Retrieved 4 April 2017 Chagall World in Turmoil Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt 30 August 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Hudsonvalley org Hudsonvalley org Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 Retrieved 15 March 2012 Marc Chagall Museum Chagal vitebsk com Archived from the original on 21 March 2012 Retrieved 28 January 2019 Biblicalarts org Biblicalarts org Retrieved 15 March 2012 Travel Yufuin Metropolis 10 October 2008 Retrieved 15 March 2012 Olympics close with tribute to Russian artists and a little self deprecating humor The Washington Post 23 February 2014 video clip Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics Closing Ceremony BibliographyAntanas Andrijauskas Litvak Art in the Context of the Ecole de Paris Library of Vilnius Auction Vilnius 2008 ISBN 978 609 8014 01 3 Chagall Marc 1947 Heywood Robert B ed The Works of the Mind The Artist Chicago University of Chicago Press OCLC 752682744 Sidney Alexander Marc Chagall A Biography G P Putnam s Sons New York 1978 Monica Bohm Duchen Chagall Art amp Ideas Phaidon London 1998 ISBN 0 7148 3160 3 Marc Chagall My Life Peter Owen Ltd London 1965 republished in 2003 ISBN 978 0 7206 1186 1 Susann Compton Chagall Harry N Abrams New York 1985 Sylvie Forestier Nathalie Hazan Brunet Dominique Jarrasse Benoit Marq Meret Meyer Chagall The Stained Glass Windows Paulist Press Mahwah 2017 Benjamin Harshav Marc Chagall and His Times A Documentary Narrative Stanford University Press Palo Alto 2004 ISBN 978 0 8047 4214 6 Benjamin Harshav Marc Chagall on Art and Culture Stanford University Press Palo Alto 2003 ISBN 0 8047 4830 6 Aleksandr Kamensky Marc Chagall An Artist From Russia Trilistnik Moscow 2005 In Russian Aleksandr Kamensky Chagall The Russian Years 1907 1922 Rizzoli New York 1988 Abridged version of Marc Chagall An Artist From Russia ISBN 0 8478 1080 1 Moynahan Brian 1992 Comrades 1917 Russia in Revolution Brown and Company ISBN 0 316 58698 6 Aaron Nikolaj Marc Chagall Rowohlt Verlag Hamburg 2003 In German Gianni Pozzi Claudia Saraceni L R Galante Masters of Art Chagall Peter Bedrick Books New York 1990 ISBN 978 0 8722 6527 1 V A Shishanov Vitebsk Museum of Modern Art a History of Creation and a Collection 1918 1941 Medisont Minsk 2007 Jonathan Wilson Marc Chagall Schocken Books New York 2007 ISBN 0 8052 4201 5 Jackie Wullschlager Chagall A Biography Knopf New York 2008 Ziva Amishia Maisels amp David Glasser Apocalypse Unveiling a Lost Masterpiece by Marc Chagall Ben Uri Gallery and Museum 2010 Shishanov V A Polish language periodicals about Marc Chagall 1912 1940 V Shishanov F Shkirando Chagall s collection Issue 5 materials of the XXVI and XXVII Chagall readings in Vitebsk 2017 2019 M Chagall Museum editorial board L Khmelnitskaya chief editor I Voronova Minsk National Library of Belarus 2019 P 57 78 Russian languageExternal links Wikiquote has quotations related to Marc Chagall Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marc Chagall Marc Chagall Unofficial website Marc Chagall Art website Marc Chagall s Famous Belarusians page on Official Website of The Republic of Belarus Archived 17 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine 55 artworks by Marc Chagall at the Ben Uri site Floirat Anetta 2019 Marc Chagall 1887 1985 and Igor Stravinsky 1882 1971 a painter and a composer facing similar twentieth century challenges a parallel revised version Academia edu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marc Chagall amp oldid 1129280034, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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