Leger was born the son of a cattle-drover in Argentan, France.
He did not excel at school and wasn't accepted into the Ecole des Beaux-Arts.
His 'Nudes in the Forest' (1909-1910), however, was a success at the Salon
and he joined Gabriel Ferrier's school. After a brief Post-Impressionist spell,
he started working in the Cubist idiom and exhibited at the Section d'Or.
With his 'Contrasts in Form' series he achieved his reputation and by 1913
he was famous.
His experience as a stretcher-bearer in the First World
War was a traumatic one but served to inspire two of his most acclaimed works,
'The Soldier with a Pipe' (1916) and 'The Game of Cards' (1917). Under the
guidance of Le Corbusier and Ozenfant he worked in the Purist mode in the
early Twenties, producing static paintings often depicting machine parts.
His work encompassed a number of different styles including stage sets for
the Ballets Suédois and filmmaking with him co-directing 'Ballet Mécanique'
(1924). He also worked as an art critic and ran his own art school, the Académie
de l'Art Contemporain.
Léger travelled widely throughout Europe in the 1930s
as well as visting the United States for the first time, exhibiting at the
Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1935 and eventually moving there in 1940
to teach until 1945. Once back in France he continued his quest to bridge
the gap between the visual arts and the general public primarily with his
series of 'Constructors'. His mural, 'The Builders' (1950) was one of the
most impressive examples of his aesthetic programme 'available to the people'.
Léger worked with flat colours with heavy black contours
often on a monumental scale. His 'Objects in Space' series show his fascination
with form and his attention to detail. Painting for him was, however, always
about describing the human experience, an obsession he expressed with supreme
confidence and originality. |