3.9.11

giacometti and the etruscans : an exhibition in Paris this fall . . .

alberto giacometti: 1901- 1966
Woman Walking (Femme qui marche), 1932.
Plaster, 150 cm high, including base.
Peggy Guggenheim Collection.
© Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris.


PARIS.- It is the most eventful exhibition of the fall, an exhibition that the specialists and art lovers of Giacometti, have been expecting for over fifty years. Giacometti’s attraction to the primitive figure was present very early on in the artist’s oeuvre. Etruscan art, which he first of all discovered in the Louvre, in the archeological department, where he went regularly, then during the exhibition on the Etruscans in 1955 in Paris, was, however, to produce in the artist a very meaningful turmoil, and made up one of the essential keys to the understanding of his best known and most powerful form of creation. The exhibition will be on view from September 16, 2011 through January 8, 2012 at the Pinacothèque de Paris.