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Fernand Léger first saw the work of Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso at the Paris gallery of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. Around 1909 Léger began to paint in a Cubist style, although his compositions in this mode are more colorful and curvilinear than works by Braque and Picasso of the same period, with their angular forms and subdued tones. An artist with far-ranging interests and talents, Léger later became a designer for theater, opera, and ballet, as well as a book illustrator, filmmaker, muralist, ceramist, and teacher.
Typically, Léger would develop a major composition by preparing studies in a variety of media. The Railway Crossing is an oil study for The Level Crossing (1919; private collection, Basel, Switzerland). When he took up this subject in 1919, he made a number of drawings and oil sketches, including the present work. Like many of his contemporaries, Léger was fascinated by the machine age. He maintained that machines and industrial objects were as important to his art as figures. References to such elements pervade The Railway Crossing. In the midst of a complex scaffolding of cylinders and beams, an arrow appears on a brightly outlined signboard. A network of solid volumes and flat forms seems to circulate within the shallow space, just as pistons move within a motor. The precise definition of his forms and the brilliance of his palette express Léger’s belief that the machine, along with the age it created, was one of the triumphs of modern civilization.

Fernand Léger first saw the work of Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso at the Paris gallery of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. Around 1909 Léger began to paint in a Cubist style, although his compositions in this mode are more colorful and curvilinear than works by Braque and Picasso of the same period, with their angular forms and subdued tones. An artist with far-ranging interests and talents, Léger later became a designer for theater, opera, and ballet, as well as a book illustrator, filmmaker, muralist, ceramist, and teacher. Typically, Léger would develop a major composition by preparing studies in a variety of media. The Railway Crossing is an oil study for The Level Crossing (1919; private collection, Basel, Switzerland). When he took up this subject in 1919, he made a number of drawings and oil sketches, including the present work. Like many of his contemporaries, Léger was fascinated by the machine age. He maintained that machines and industrial objects were as important to his art as figures. References to such elements pervade The Railway Crossing. In the midst of a complex scaffolding of cylinders and beams, an arrow appears on a brightly outlined signboard. A network of solid volumes and flat forms seems to circulate within the shallow space, just as pistons move within a motor. The precise definition of his forms and the brilliance of his palette express Léger’s belief that the machine, along with the age it created, was one of the triumphs of modern civilization.

The Railway Crossing (Sketch)
oil on canvas
1919
Fernand Léger (1881-1955)
France

#fernandleger #art #modernart #therailwaycrossing #oilpainting #c1919 #france #frenchmodernism #modernpainting #20thcenturyart #modernism #cubism #tubism #cubistart #machineage #europe #europeanart

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Fernand Léger (1881–1955) was a French painter, sculptor, and filmmaker who pioneered "Tubism," a, distinctive form of Cubism characterized by tubular, mechanical forms and bold, primary colors. Influenced by modern industrial technology, his art celebrated the dynamism of urban life. His work evolved from early Cézanne-inspired paintings to a "mechanical" period, later becoming more figurative and populist.

In his mature style, Fernand Léger worked a great deal with human forms, figures with flowing contours and with strong colours over the whole field. These dancers fly forward from the left and a draped piece of cloth on the right and the winding stalk of a rose the dancer on the left is holding in her hand contrast with the full surfaces of the dancers' skin. The keys? The keys are the starting point of the architectonic design on the right-hand side of the painting, contrasting in turn with the two triangular shapes. And finally, in contrast to the square and pointed shapes is a rounded, gently flowing "cloud frame" which completes the composition at the top and the bottom.

Fernand Léger (1881–1955) was a French painter, sculptor, and filmmaker who pioneered "Tubism," a, distinctive form of Cubism characterized by tubular, mechanical forms and bold, primary colors. Influenced by modern industrial technology, his art celebrated the dynamism of urban life. His work evolved from early Cézanne-inspired paintings to a "mechanical" period, later becoming more figurative and populist. In his mature style, Fernand Léger worked a great deal with human forms, figures with flowing contours and with strong colours over the whole field. These dancers fly forward from the left and a draped piece of cloth on the right and the winding stalk of a rose the dancer on the left is holding in her hand contrast with the full surfaces of the dancers' skin. The keys? The keys are the starting point of the architectonic design on the right-hand side of the painting, contrasting in turn with the two triangular shapes. And finally, in contrast to the square and pointed shapes is a rounded, gently flowing "cloud frame" which completes the composition at the top and the bottom.

Les danseuses aux clés
(Dancers with Keys)
oil on canvas
1930
Fernand Léger (1881-1955)
France

#fernandleger #france #art #painting #modernart #cubism #tubism #lesdanseusesauxcles #dancerswithkeys #oilpainting #c1930 #modernism #geometry #figurative #20thcenturyart #frenchart #frenchmodernism

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#peoplematchingartworks #fernandleger #centrepompidou #stefandraschan #photography #contemporaryart #Paris

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@theartbystander The light is soft at the Fondation Maeght @fondationmaeght in southern France.

📸 Alberto Giacometti, Les Femmes de Venise, 1956 - 1957 et Fernand Léger, La Partie de Campagne, 1954 - Archives Fondation Maeght.

#albertogiacometti #fernandleger
#fernandléger
#fondationmaeght

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#peoplematchingartworks #fernandleger
#altenationalgalerie #stefandraschan
#photography #contemporaryart #berlin

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Great Black and Red Branch
ceramic sculpture
1951
Fernand Léger
French, 1881–1955

#art #sculpture #modernart #modernsculpture #abstract #fernandleger #france #greatblackandredbranch #ceramicsculpture #dated1951 #vintage1950s #vintagemodern #modernism #modernistsculpture #mcm #midcenturymodern

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The Red Table
oil on canvas
1920
Fernand Léger
France

#art #modernart #fernandleger #theredtable #france #circa1920

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Picasso's cubist painting of three musicians

Picasso's cubist painting of three musicians

Léger's tubist (as his style was nicknamed) painting of three musicians

Léger's tubist (as his style was nicknamed) painting of three musicians

Three Musicians by Pablo Picasso, 1921 (first image)

Three Musicians by Fernand Léger, 1930 (second image)

Art critics called Picasso "cubist" and Léger "tubist" because of the angular vs. cylindrical forms that each favored in his work.

#painting #cubism […]

[Original post on hear-me.social]

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Fernand Léger, original exhibition poster, 1984, les disques dans la ville #cubist #painting geometric decor, concentric circles #FernandLeger #France #art #wiseshopper

www.etsy.com/listing/1840...

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Died #otd Fernand Léger (1881-1955), French painter, 70 years ago today #FernandLeger life story...

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Ballet Mécanique (1924, 2K Digitally Restored, With Score by George Antheil)
Ballet Mécanique (1924, 2K Digitally Restored, With Score by George Antheil) YouTube video by Journey To The Center Of The Cinema

#fernandleger #art #animation

youtu.be/oMnZgykH1Bk?...

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Fernand Léger, the cyclist, cycling races, bike decor, vintage bicycle, cubist style, lithographic print #wiseshopper #FernandLeger #Cyclism #tourdeFrance #art #artforsale

www.etsy.com/listing/1332...

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#FernandLeger

Deauville la Sieste (1950)

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#FernandLeger 🎨

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Vendredi / Le Lieu Unique / En stock :
Robert L. Delevoy, Léger, Skira, Le goût de notre temps, 1962.
-
#fernandleger #skira
#bookstore #livres #bouquiniste #vinylcollection #vinyls #recordstore #disquaire #lelieuunique #nantes

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La fondation Kröller Müller aux Pays-Bas 🇳🇱 n’est pas sans rappeler la fondation Maeght à Saint-Paul-de-Vence. Un délicieux moment.
#Art #OswaldWenckebach #FernandLeger #PietMondrian #AlbertoGiacometti #KrollerMullerMuseum #DeHogeVeluwe

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#Art #FernandLeger

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Still Life
oil on canvas
1926
Fernand Léger
French, 1881–1955

#fernandleger #art #modernart #modernpainting #stilllife #circa1926

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So cool! Reminds me of early #FernandLeger

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My Loves 🥰
#fujifilm #gfx #minolta #art #fernandleger

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Fernand Léger, lithographic print, the birds, importance of art in life, expression of a personality, modern art #blue #red #yellow #modernart #FernandLeger #FrenchPainter #BlueSkyArt

www.etsy.com/listing/4936...

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Léger first saw the work of the Cubists Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso at the Paris gallery of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. Around 1909 Léger began to experiment with geometric shapes, complementary colors, and strong outlines, although his paintings remained largely nonrepresentational until after World War I. 

During Great War, the Musée du Louvre, Paris, closed its doors to protect its collections. When the museum reopened in 1920–21, artists were among its most regular visitors, spurring a new interest in classicism. Fernand Léger’s fascination with the art of the past, as well as his experiences of the war, had a profound impact on his work.

Léger invoked classicism in his quest to find monumental figures for his paintings. He built on the subject of the odalisque in elaborate settings, updating the classical figure with solid, machine-like imagery and densely packed, colorful compositions.

In the years following, he introduced volumetric forms that resembled pistons and pipes into his compositions, joining others in the Parisian vanguard in charting a more sober, conservative course that placed renewed emphasis on objective observation.

Substituting hard metallic tubes for pliant flesh and flat patterned disks for soft and dense pillows, the artist updated the classical figure of the odalisque (a female slave or concubine often pictured in the history of art as a reclining nude) with his particular blend of Cubism and machine aesthetics. 

"Reclining Woman" demonstrates Léger’s interest in producing “everyday poetic images”: paintings in which the manufactured object is the “principal personage,” shown as precisely as possible to reveal an absolute sculptural value rather than sentimental associations. 

This work exemplifies the Purist style, a kind of industrial classicism that focused on utilitarian objects. Léger hoped that through such paintings, art would become accessible to the whole of modern society rather than to just a privileged few.

Léger first saw the work of the Cubists Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso at the Paris gallery of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. Around 1909 Léger began to experiment with geometric shapes, complementary colors, and strong outlines, although his paintings remained largely nonrepresentational until after World War I. During Great War, the Musée du Louvre, Paris, closed its doors to protect its collections. When the museum reopened in 1920–21, artists were among its most regular visitors, spurring a new interest in classicism. Fernand Léger’s fascination with the art of the past, as well as his experiences of the war, had a profound impact on his work. Léger invoked classicism in his quest to find monumental figures for his paintings. He built on the subject of the odalisque in elaborate settings, updating the classical figure with solid, machine-like imagery and densely packed, colorful compositions. In the years following, he introduced volumetric forms that resembled pistons and pipes into his compositions, joining others in the Parisian vanguard in charting a more sober, conservative course that placed renewed emphasis on objective observation. Substituting hard metallic tubes for pliant flesh and flat patterned disks for soft and dense pillows, the artist updated the classical figure of the odalisque (a female slave or concubine often pictured in the history of art as a reclining nude) with his particular blend of Cubism and machine aesthetics. "Reclining Woman" demonstrates Léger’s interest in producing “everyday poetic images”: paintings in which the manufactured object is the “principal personage,” shown as precisely as possible to reveal an absolute sculptural value rather than sentimental associations. This work exemplifies the Purist style, a kind of industrial classicism that focused on utilitarian objects. Léger hoped that through such paintings, art would become accessible to the whole of modern society rather than to just a privileged few.

Femme allongée (Reclining Woman) by Fernand Léger (French) - Oil on canvas / 1922 - Art Institute of Chicago (Illinois) #womeninart #art #oilpainting #cubism #ArtInstituteofChicago #ARTIC #FernandLéger #artwork #Léger #FernandLeger #purist #womensart #FrenchArtist #FrenchArt #odalisque #bskyart

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#Art #FernandLeger

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Exposition au Musée Maillol à Paris de Nadia Léger.
#art #museemaillol #fernandleger #nadialeger

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Ballet Mécanique Fernand Leger & Dudley Murphy
Ballet Mécanique Fernand Leger & Dudley Murphy YouTube video by UKMPTV

www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ez0L... #fernandleger #dudleymurphy #dadaist vs #surrealism

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Fernand Léger, the cyclist, cycling races, bike decor, vintage bicycle, cubist style, reproduction in lithography #artgallery #contemporaryart #interiordesign #Etsy #Etsyfinds #Artist #ArtCollector #ArtShare #Art #French #FernandLeger

www.etsy.com/listing/1332...

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“Above all, it is a matter of loving art, not understanding it.”
#FernandLeger #botd
February 4, 1881-
August 17, 1955
#French #painter #sculpture #filmmaker #artist #tubism #cubist #modernist
#quote #art

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"Color is a human need like water and fire.

It is a raw material indispensable to life"

#FernandLeger

Leger and model Anne Gunning, who is wearing a gown with a pattern in the style of Leger's work, seen in the painting of two women (left) and in the half hidden still life.

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"The Beautiful is everywhere; perhaps more in the arrangement of your saucepans on the white walls of your kitchen than in your eighteenth-century living room or in the official museums."

#FernandLeger

“Mona Lisa with the keys” (1930) by Léger

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Fernand Léger, the cyclist, cycling races, bike decor, vintage bicycle #FernandLeger #BuyIntoArt #AYearForArt #prints #printsforsale #vintagePrints #art #shopsmall #EtsySeller #artcollectors #giftYourself #giftideas #wiseshopper #BlueSkyArt
For sale here www.etsy.com/listing/1332...

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