Rooster

 

Aubusson tapestry woven by the Goubely workshop.
With its faded selvedge.
Circa 1950.

 

 

Lurçat's body of work is immense; however, it is his role in the renewal of the art of tapestry that has ensured his lasting legacy. From 1917, he began with needlepoint works, and then, in the 1920s and 30s, he worked with Marie Cuttoli. His first collaboration with the Gobelins Manufactory dates from 1937, when he simultaneously discovered the Apocalypse Tapestry in Angers, which definitively inspired him to dedicate himself to tapestry. He addressed technical questions initially with François Tabard, and then, during his time in Aubusson during the war, he defined his system: large stitches, counted tones, and numbered, drawn cartoons. A gigantic production then began (more than 1000 cartoons), amplified by the desire to involve his painter friends, the creation of the APCT (Association of Tapestry Cartoon Painters) and the collaboration with the La Demeure gallery and Denise Majorel, then by his role as a tireless propagator of the medium throughout the world.

His woven work testifies to a specifically decorative art of imagery, in a very personal symbolic iconography, cosmogonic (sun, planets, zodiac, 4 elements…), stylized plant, animal (goats, roosters, butterflies, chimeras…), stand out against a background without perspective (deliberately far removed from painting), and intended, in his most ambitious cartoons, to share a vision that is both poetic (he sometimes embellishes these tapestries with quotations) and philosophical (the major themes are addressed from the war onwards: freedom, resistance, fraternity, truth…) and whose culmination will be the “Song of the World” (Jean Lurçat Museum, former Saint-Jean hospital, Angers), unfinished at his death.

The rooster, in different forms, with different attributes, playing different roles, is the central figure of Lurçat's bestiary, a kind of stylistic figure declined to infinity: the singularity here comes from the crown of ivy, and the feather-leaves, exemplary of the animal-vegetable syntheses, specific to the artist.

 

Bibliography:
Exhibition catalog, French Tapestry, Museum of Modern Art, Paris, 1946;
Tapestries by Jean Lurçat 1939-1957, Pierre Vorms Publisher, 1957
; Exhibition catalog, Jean Lurçat, Tapestries from the Rothmans Foundation, Metz Museum, 1969
; Exhibition catalog, Lurçat, 10 Years Later, Museum of Modern Art of the City of Paris, 1976
; Exhibition catalog, The Domains of Jean Lurçat, Angers, Jean Lurçat Museum and Museum of Contemporary Tapestry, 1986;
Symposium, Jean Lurçat and the Renaissance of Tapestry in Aubusson, Aubusson, Departmental Museum of Tapestry, 1992

Exhibition
catalog, Dialogues with Lurçat, Museums of Lower Normandy, 1992 Jean Lurçat, Simone Lurçat Donation, Académie des Beaux-Arts, 2004; Gérard Denizeau, Jean Lurçat, Liénart, 2013
; Exhibition catalog: Jean Lurçat, Master of French Modernism, Halle, Kunsthalle, 2016;
Exhibition catalog: Jean Lurçat to the Sole Sound of the Sun, Paris, Galerie des Gobelins, 2016