Acquavella Plans 50-Work Matisse Exhibition This Spring
“I made sculpture because what interested me in painting was the clarifi-cation of my ideas. I changed medium and worked in clay as a respite from painting when I had done absolutely all that I could for the moment. Which is to say that it was always for the purpose of organization. It was done to give order to my feelings, to seek a method that completely suited me. When I found it in sculpture, it helped me in painting.”
—HENRI MATISSE
Acquavella Galleries is pleased to present Matisse: The Pursuit of Harmony, an exhibition featuring fifty paintings, works on paper, and sculpture by Henri Matisse on loan from museums, foundations, and private collections. On view from April 9 through May 22, 2026, the exhibition traces Matisse’s investigation of form in two and three dimensions, from paintings and sculptures made at the start of the 20th century through the next five decades of his career. Although Acquavella has dealt in exceptional works by Matisse for over sixty years, this marks the gallery’s first exhibition devoted to the French artist since 1973.
Henri Matisse (1869–1954) is widely regarded as the unparalleled modernist master of color, having revolutionized art with his luminous palette and lyrical color harmonies, but his experimentation with form was equally central to his artistic pursuits. In each chapter of his career, Matisse worked to refine and essentialize his approach to form and the figure. In his own words: “A work of art must be harmonious in its entirety: any superfluous detail would replace some other essential detail in the mind of the spectator.” Simplified, rhythmic forms, often inspired by the graceful, flowing lines of the arabesque, were integral to Matisse’s lifelong pursuit of harmony and balance in his art.
The presentation begins with two early sculptures, The Serf (1900–04) and Madeleine I (1901), and his closely related painting Male Model (1900) and drawing Study for Madeleine (c. 1901). Of the more than eighty sculptures Matisse created, more than half date to the first decade of the 20th century—a radically innovative chapter of the artist’s practice, during which he undertook an extensive series of figure studies alongside his explosive and unprecedented explorations of color. Turning to sculpture to work through problems he encountered in painting, he was able to more thoroughly consider mass, volume, and perspective. This fuller understanding of the figure allowed him to simplify form to its essential rhythms in two and three dimensions. A conversation emerged between the disciplines in Matisse’s work; the same poses appear in his paintings and sculptures, as each medium encouraged formal developments in the other.
This is particularly evident in his exploration of the female form. For example, while working on the ambitious Large Seated Nude (1922–29), Matisse also worked through this dynamic, cantilevered pose of the figure in two dimensions, notably in paintings such as Odalisque couchée aux magnolias (1923) and Odalisque with a Tambourine (1925–26), which are presented in conversation with the sculpture. The theme of the figure viewed from behind also runs through the artist’s work, exemplified by the 1917 painting Seated Nude, Back Turned and the four seminal bronze reliefs Back I–IV, made between 1908 and 1930, which encapsulate Matisse’s gradual development of form from naturalistic figuration to starker geometries. Focusing on the languorous reclining figure in the 1920s and the 1930s, the exhibition features over twenty representations of nudes, presenting the female figure in fluid, dynamic poses in both two and three dimensions.

Matisse working on Large Seated Nude (Grand Nu assis) in his Nice studio, mid-1920s.
Photo by Ewing Galloway/ UIG / Bridgeman Images
Matisse: The Pursuit of Harmony will be accompanied by a fully illustrated, hardcover catalogue, which will receive additional international distribution through Rizzoli. The book will include a lead text by John Klein, professor of art history at Washington University in St. Louis and a renowned specialist on Matisse. Alastair Wright, author of Matisse and the Subject of Modernism (2006), will contribute a text on the dialogue between Matisse’s study of nature and his approach to the figure. The distinguished British art historian Elizabeth Cowling, who has written extensively on Cubism, Surrealism, Matisse, and Picasso, will also contribute an essay to the publication, on Matisse’s approach to the nude in the 1920s.
Acquavella Plans 50-Work Matisse Exhibition This Spring