This is the catalogue of the exhibition held at the Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts, in Lausanne,and juxtaposes the work of two painters which at first sight have nothing in common: one wasFranco-Swiss and died in 1925; the other is American, was born in 1927, and is still active.
Alex Katz is an important figure in late twentieth-century American painting. His resolutelyfigurative work concentrates on classic subjects, such as individual or group portraits, naturalor urban landscapes and still lifes with flowers. He was linked to pop art in the early 1960s onaccount of his extremely neutral technique which resembled that found in advertising and infilm shots. Preferring a smooth, textureless painting technique, often working on a monumentalscale and building the composition by simplifying forms and picture planes and relying ona restricted palette, Katz has unconsciously taken over where Vallotton left off, extending thelatter’s work to the borders of abstraction. Indeed, Félix Vallotton never “inspired” Alex Katzsince the American painter is actually not very familiar with Vallotton’s work. Even so, it is nothard to find some surprising similarities between the two artists, both having the same aim: toexalt through painting.
Bernard Fibicher is an art historian and Director of the the Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts,Lausanne.
Éric de Chassey is a French art historian, exhibition curator, critic, and professor of contemporaryart at the François-Rabelais University of Tours. He is the Director of the Académie deFrance in Rome – Villa Medici.
Catherine Lepdor is a curator at the Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts, Lausanne.
Camille Lévêque-Claudet is an art historian and a curator at the Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts, Lausanne.