He looked at his unfinished work, Le Concert . It was massive, a sea of red and blue, instruments waiting for a sound that wouldn't come. He realized then that he had reached the summit. There was nowhere left to go but into the blue.
He stood before a canvas, his tall, gaunt frame silhouetted against the Mediterranean. For years, he had lived on the razor's edge between abstraction and reality. He had built his world with palette knives, laying on thick slabs of paint like a mason building a wall. But recently, the walls were thinning. The heavy impasto was giving way to washes of light, as if he were trying to paint the air itself. nicolas de staГ«l
Earlier that month, he had attended a concert in Paris featuring the music of Anton Webern. The sparse, crystalline notes had haunted him. "I want to paint like that," he whispered to the empty room. "Silence made visible." He looked at his unfinished work, Le Concert
His mind drifted to Paris, to the poverty-stricken years with Jeannine Guillou, the woman who had seen his genius when no one else did. She was gone now, a casualty of the war’s deprivations. He thought of his recent trip to Sicily, where the ancient temples had appeared to him as blocks of pure, vibrating light. He was trying to capture that vibration, but it felt like trying to hold water in a sieve. There was nowhere left to go but into the blue
The light in Antibes was too bright, a physical weight that pressed against Nicolas de Staël’s studio windows. It was March 1955, and the man who had spent his life running from the shadows of his Russian past—the son of a General in the Czar’s Guard, orphaned by the Revolution—found himself trapped by the very thing he chased: color.