Who was Gertrude Stein ? Portrait in 5 quotes

23 August 2023
Among the famous Americans in Paris, do you know Gertrude Stein? Both an art collector and an artist herself, she was a key figure in the art world at the beginning of the 20th century. In preparation for the autumn exhibition at the Musée du Luxembourg, here's a portrait of her in 5 quotes, by the artist herself!


America is my country and Paris is my hometown.

Gertrude Stein was born in Pennsylvania in 1874, into a wealthy Jewish family. She was the youngest of five children and grew up in California. When she was 14 years old her mother died, and her brothers Michael and Leo became her guardians.

It was disappointment in love that led her to leave her home environment, at the age of 30. She decided to follow Leo in his travels: she joined him in Paris, the capital of the arts, bringing renown to the rue de Fleurus – a street not far from the Musée du Luxembourg!

 

A writer should write with his eyes and a painter paint with his ears.

Illustration Gertrude Stein
Cézanne, Madame Cézanne à l’éventail 1878 © Collection Emil Bührle, in a long term loan to the Kunsthaus Zürich

When Gertrude Stein arrived in Paris, a true aesthete, she set out to conquer... modern art! She was just as interested in painting as she was in writing, convinced that the two art forms fuelled and complemented each other.

A warm, sociable and tactful character, she very soon became part of the art scene of the time. She met many artists, including Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Pable Picasso, James Joyce, Ernest Hemingway, Francis Picabia and Jean Cocteau. Together with her brother, she became an art collector and even the first patron of Pablo Picasso!

This environment stimulated and inspired her work as a writer and poet. She began to engage more deeply with her writing, in her mother tongue, adopting a style which was a real innovation for the time. She wrote Three Lives in 1909 whilst contemplating Cézanne’s painting (Madame Cézanne à l’éventail 1878 – 1888), interweaving thoughts on texture and density in her writing.

 

A rose is a rose is a rose

In a spirit of boundless freedom, she reinvented…language. What is it that makes her writing so unique? The way in which she drew inspiration from the aesthetic, the slow pace or the sensuality of the painting, but also from the fast, fleeting, repetitive nature of all that is cerebral and psychological.

And as for the reason why: it reflects the direction of her studies in the United States, in medicine and philosophy. Her writing is rhythmical and full-bodied, both sensual and intellectual.

 

That’s what you all are… All of you young people who served in the war. You are a lost generation.

Gertrude Stein received many artists in her salon following the First World War, and it was she who suggested these words to Ernest Hemingway. He used them in the epigraph to his novel The Sun also Rises, 1926. It was the start of a broad artistic movement that sought to invent new values and a new artistic language through which they could be expressed.

 

Disillusion in living is finding that no one can really ever be agreeing with you completely on anything.

Illustration Gertrude Stein
Gertrude Stein The World Is Round, illustrated by Sir Francis Rose New York, William R. Scott inc, 1939 ©Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library

Often described as the grandmother of modernism, Gertrude Stein led an emancipated life in Paris, very much in the present. Her aesthetic and her literary style are firmly avant-garde.

New, experimental, breaking the classical codes, her style was surprising and discordant, and at the same time a source of inspiration for the artistic world of the 1920s.

She became a famous figure, photographed and painted, by Man Ray, Cecil Beaton and Pablo Picasso, to mention but a few. It was with Pablo Picasso in particular that she forged an exceptional artistic collaboration…

Opening soon!

Read also

THE GERTRUDE STEIN AND PABLO PICASSO EXHIBITION IS OPEN!

Article - 13 September 2023
He disrupts the codes of painting, she overturns those of literature. Together, they are the originators of a new language, to which many artists still identify today. The exhibition 'Gertrude Stein and Pablo Picasso: The Invention of Language': it's happening now at the Musée du Luxembourg until January 28th!

Les Petites-Dalles, a fishing village turned Impressionist motif

Article - 6 July 2023
Avec ses paysages pittoresques, parsemés de petites cités balnéaires où se rencontrent musiciens, écrivains et peintres, la Normandie du XIXe est un lieu d’émulation artistique et de villégiature pour la famille Monet. De tous les villages côtiers, celui des Petites-Dalles remporte un vif succès jusqu’à devenir… un sujet de peinture pour les impressionnistes ! À contempler dans l'exposition au Musée du Luxembourg jusqu'au 16 juillet.
Browse magazine