TRAVELER’S DIARY-Paris II:Musée Maillol

POP ART - Icons that matter, Collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art-New YorkJanuary 21, 2018, Saturday evening, the desire to breathe, even in the rainy Paris, after the oppressive atmosphere and the bustling crowd at the Center Georges-Pompidou is imperative. The exhibition “POP ART – Icons that matter, Collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art-New York” is closing on Sunday.

By Efi Michaparou

Our time was limited and in about an hour Musée Maillol is closing, but our desire to visit the exhibition we even greater, we started to run from Le Marais and Center Georges-Pompidou to Musée Maillol on the opposite bank of the Seine, the museum is small like Maison Rouge but with new visions on contemporary art, and it was a real surprise. The artworks of the most well-known representatives of Pop Art, from the Whitney Museum of American Art Collection, create a new array on the stone walls of the Museum, creating a new relationship and narrative of seeing these well-known works with a more intellectual and different way. French spectators, who are less familiar with Claes Oldenburg’s sculpture or Tom Wesselmann’s painting, seem to be wondering whether it is art or over-valued art. However, the exhibited artworks were a small sample (3-5 of each artist) but undoubtedly of their best. For me, Roy Lichtenstein’s portraits are still jaw-cracking, as are the sculptures   by Claes Oldenburg or Jim Dine, even the choice of the overrated Andy Warhol’s works were excellent. This Pop Art exhibition was not just well curated nor just a visual oasis, a deep breath and a nice break, but also was a clear exhibition which quickly and easily introduced the average viewer into the history and the understanding of Pop Art.

 Exhibition view: POP ART-Icons that matter, 2018, Musée Maillol-Paris
Exhibition view: POP ART-Icons that matter, 2018, Musée Maillol-Paris

 

 

Claes Oldenburg, French Fries and Ketchup, 1963, © Claes Oldenburg, Whitney Museum of American Art Collection, 50th Anniversary Gift of Mr and Mrs Roberts M. Meltzer
Claes Oldenburg, French Fries and Ketchup, 1963, Whitney Museum of American Art Collection

 

 

 Exhibition view: POP ART-Icons that matter, 2018, Musée Maillol-Paris
Exhibition view: POP ART-Icons that matter, 2018, Musée Maillol-Paris

 

 

Tom Wesselmann, Great American Nude Cut-Out, 1970, Pencil and think liquitex in colors on thin board laid down onto white card, 13 x 17 inches, Edition of 100, signed dated and numbered lower left, Whitney Museum of American Art Collection
Tom Wesselmann, Great American Nude Cut-Out, 1970, Whitney Museum of American Art Collection

 

 

 Exhibition view: POP ART-Icons that matter, 2018, Musée Maillol-Paris
Exhibition view: POP ART-Icons that matter, 2018, Musée Maillol-Paris

 

 

Left: Jasper Johns, poster for Merce Cunningham Company, 1968, Whitney Museum of American Art Collection. Center: Tom Wesselmann, Seascape (Foot), 1968, Whitney Museum of American Art Collection. Right: Roy Lichtenstein, Explosion, 1965-6, Whitney Museum of American Art Collection.
Left: Jasper Johns, poster for Merce Cunningham Company, 1968, Whitney Museum of American Art Collection. Center: Tom Wesselmann, Seascape (Foot), 1968, Whitney Museum of American Art Collection. Right: Roy Lichtenstein, Explosion, 1965-6, Whitney Museum of American Art Collection

 

 

 Exhibition view: POP ART-Icons that matter, 2018, Musée Maillol-Paris
Exhibition view: POP ART-Icons that matter, 2018, Musée Maillol-Paris