Gustav-Adolf Mossa Explained

Gustav-Adolf Mossa
Birth Date:1883 1, df=yes
Birth Place:Nice, France
Nationality:French
Occupation:Museum Curator, Illustrator, Writer, Painter

Gustav-Adolf Mossa (28 January 1883 – 25 May 1971) was a French illustrator, playwright, essayist, curator and late Symbolist painter.

Early life

Mossa was born 28 January 1883 in Nice, to an Italian mother, Marguerite Alfieri, and, an artist, founding curator of the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Nice (Nice Museum of Fine Arts) and organiser of the Nice Carnival from 1873.[1]

Art and theatre work

Mossa received his initial artistic training from his father[2] before studying at the School of Decorative Arts in Nice until 1900, where he became acquainted with Art Nouveau and was later introduced to the Symbolist movement after visiting the Exposition Universelle in the same year.[3] Mossa was heavily inspired by the art of Symbolist painter Gustave Moreau[4] and Symbolist writers, such as Charles Baudelaire, Stéphane Mallarmé, Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly and Joris-Karl Huysmans.[5]

The main body of Mossa's public and private art work was created with water colours and strong ink lines, the subjects including caricatures, Carnival or medieval scenes, portraits and landscapes, with a fascination for the French Riveria in particular.[6] He also created wooden reliefs, designed theatre scenery,[2] wrote literary essays[6] and created book illustrations, including a large series of drawings for the work of Robert Schumann.[7]

In 1902 he began collaborating with his father on the Nice Carnival project, designing floats and posters. Both father and son are still celebrated for raising the Carnival's prestige, and the event continues to be a major, large scale tourism attraction in Nice.[8]

Symbolist paintings

Mossa's decade long Symbolist period (1900–1911) was his most prolific and began as a reaction to the recent boom of socialite leisure activity on the French Rivera,[9] his works comically satirising or condemning what was viewed as an increasingly materialistic society[10] and the perceived danger of the emerging New Woman at the turn of the century, whom Mossa appears to consider perverse by nature.[4]

His most common subjects were femme fatale figures, some from Biblical sources, such as modernised versions of Judith, Delilah and Salome,[11] mythological creatures such as Harpies or more contemporary and urban figures, such as his towering and dominant bourgeoise woman in Woman of Fashion and Jockey. (1906)[12] His 1905 work Elle, the logo for the 2017 Geschlechterkampf exhibition on representations of gender in art, is an explicit example of Mossa's interpretation of malevolent female sexuality, with a nude giantess sitting atop a pile of bloodied corpses, a fanged cat sitting over her crotch, and wearing an elaborate headress inscribed with the Latin hoc volo, sic jubeo, sit pro ratione voluntas (What I want, I order, my will is reason enough).[13]

Many aspects of Mossa's paintings of this period were also indictive of the decadent movement, with his references to Diabolism,[14] depictions of lesbianism (such as his two paintings of Sappho),[15] or an emphasis on violent, sadistic or morbid scenes.[1]

Though these paintings are the subject of most present day exhibitions, scholarly articles and books on the artist, they were not released to the public until after Mossa's death in 1971.[5]

In 1911, Mossa discovered Flemish Primitive and Gothic art while in Brugge and abandoned Symbolism.[16]

Theatre

Mossa wrote several operas and plays, and contributed to a revival of dialectal theater with his first theatrical piece Lou Nouvé o sia lou pantai de Barb' Anto (1922), written in the Niçard dialect.[16] Following the play's success, Mossa established the Lou Teatre de Barba Martin group, who performed his comedies 'Phygaço' (1924), 'La Tina' (1926) and 'Lou Rei Carneval' (1935), until 1940.[6] His plays are still performed in Nice.[17]

Gallery work and later life

After the death of his father, Alexis, Mossa took over the curation of the Nice Museum of Fine Arts in 1927 and would keep the position until his death in 1971.[18] Mossa would later bequeath most of his own artistic pieces to the gallery.[2]

From the end of the Second World War, Mossa devoted himself to creating works about the City of Nice, illustrating official documents, drawing armorial bearings and traditional suits of the County, and producing several watercolours of the region's landscapes.[16]

Personal life

In 1908 he married Charlotte-Andrée Naudin, whom he divorced in 1918. He married again in 1925 to Lucrèce Roux, until her death in 1955. He was married a final time in 1956 to Marie–Marcelle Butteli, until his death on 25 May 1971.

Exhibitions and collections

Exhibitions

Permanent

Solo
Group

Further reading

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Caroline De Westenholz (2017) "Gustav Adolf Mossa (1883–1971), Lui, A Portrait of Varius", pp. 159–160 in Varian Studies, Vol. 3: A Varian Symposium. Cambridge Scholars.
  2. Web site: GUSTAV ADOLF MOSSA FRENCH, 1883–1971. invaluable.com.
  3. Web site: Gustav-Adolf Mossa (1883–1971) – THE NIGHTMARE NETWORK. www.ligotti.net.
  4. Michael Gibson (1999) Symbolism. Taschen America Llc. p. 238.
  5. Web site: Gustav-Adolf Mossa – Harter Galerie. Harter Galerie.
  6. Web site: Gustav Adolf Mossa – Europe-Cities. www.europe-cities.com. 20 February 2018. 17 October 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171017061221/http://www.europe-cities.com/destinations/france/people/gustav-adolf-mossa/. dead.
  7. Web site: Mossa, Gustave-Adolphe or Gustav-Adolph – Benezit Dictionary of Artists. 2011. 10.1093/benz/9780199773787.article.B00126475. 978-0-19-977378-7.
  8. Web site: The popular art creators of the Carnival . Nice-RendezVous. 7 January 2010. NiceRendezVous.
  9. Web site: Gustav-Adolf Mossa – Eric Gillis Fine Art. 15 February 2018.
  10. Web site: La Marchande d'Amour : The Commodification of Flesh and Paint » Sequitur – Blog Archive – Boston University. www.bu.edu.
  11. Rosina Neginsky (2013) Salome: The Image of a Woman Who Never Was. Cambridge Scholars. p. 78.
  12. Michael Gibson (1999) Symbolism. Taschen America Llc. p. 12.
  13. Web site: Battle of the Sexes . geschlechterkampf.staedelmuseum.de.
  14. Per Faxneld (2017) Satanic Feminism: Lucifer as the Liberator of Woman in Nineteenth-Century Culture. Oxford University Press. p. 262.
  15. Nicole G.Albert (2016) Lesbian Decadence: Representations in Art and Literature of Fin-de-Siècle France
  16. Web site: Gustav-Adolf Mossa (1883–1971), painter of the French Riviera – NiceRendezVous 2016. Nice-RendezVous. 6 January 2010.
  17. Web site: 20e édition de la fèsta d'Occitània. theatre-francis-gag.org.
  18. Rosemary o'Neill (2012) Art and Visual Culture on the French Riviera, 1956-971: The Ecole de Nice. Routledge. p. 31.
  19. Web site: Musée-Galerie d' Alexis at Gustav Adolf Mossa in Nice, France. www.gpsmycity.com.
  20. Web site: Œuvre " Circé " . Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium. www.fine-arts-museum.be.