Collecting guide: the life and art of Henri Matisse

An overview of the endlessly innovative French artist, from his love of textiles to his mastery of colour and line in his paintings, prints, drawings and cut-outs. Illustrated with works offered at Christie’s

Main image:

Matisse modeling Grand nu assis in his Nice studio, mid-1920s. Photo: Ewing Galloway / UIG / Bridgeman Images. Artwork: © 2024 Succession H. Matisse / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

A flight towards the brilliant light

Henri Matisse was born in 1869 in the small town of Bohain-en-Vermandois, in the flatlands of northeastern France. Its skies were grey, its houses of dull brick, and its fields devoted to acre after acre of sugar beet. According to Matisse’s biographer, Hilary Spurling, his whole career represented a rejection of that early sobriety and ‘a flight towards the brilliant light’.

Early Fauve paintings

Matisse’s earliest work, from the 1890s, bore the influence of Realism and naturalism. His first creative breakthrough came in the middle of the next decade, at the vanguard of Fauvism. Matisse rejected his early influences and turned to a wild use of colour, aiming to express his feelings about the material world.

Henri Matisse, Woman with a Hat, 1905. San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Photo: © 2021. Album/Scala, Florence. Artwork: © 2023 Succession H. Matisse / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Henri Matisse, Woman with a Hat, 1905. San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Photo: © 2021. Album/Scala, Florence. Artwork: © 2024 Succession H. Matisse / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Among Matisse’s great works in this style was a 1905 portrait of his wife, Amélie, Woman with a Hat  (now part of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art collection). Another was a still life from 1907, Les Pivoines  (sold for just over $19 million at Christie’s in New York in 2012), in which Matisse flattened the composition, and the wall behind the vase of peonies all but dematerialises into a cascade of colour.

‘Fauve paintings by Matisse don’t come onto the market too often,’ says Jessica Fertig, Senior Director of Impressionist and Modern Art at Christie’s in New York. ‘But when they do, there’s always a great deal of interest. There’s a recognition that this was a transformative period both for Matisse and for all Western art.’

The collector of textiles, from Persian carpets to African wall hangings

Many of Matisse’s ancestors had been weavers. As Spurling put it, ‘textiles were in his blood’. He collected Persian carpets, Arab embroideries and African wall hangings throughout his life, his studio becoming a treasure trove of exotic and vibrant pattern. 

The collection was practical — he called it his ‘working library’ — with textiles appearing and reappearing in a large number of his paintings, drawings and prints. They also contributed to a key development in Matisse’s art in the run-up to the First World War, when he rejected the old laws of perspective and three-dimensional illusion for internalised, purely pictorial spaces.

Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Etude autour de La blouse roumaine, 1939. Pen and India ink on paper. 16⅜ x 12⅞ in (41.5 x 32.8 cm). Estimate: $40,000-60,000. Offered in Matisse on Paper: Prints & Drawings from the Matisse Family Collection on 5-17 June at Christie’s in New York

Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Figure assise, blouse transparente, 1929. Lithograph, on Japon paper, 1929. Image: 21 x 17½ in (533 x 445 mm); sheet: 25⅜ x 19⅝ in (645 x 499 mm). Estimate: $8,000-12,000. Offered in Matisse on Paper: Prints & Drawings from the Matisse Family Collection on 5-17 June at Christie’s in New York

Textiles became much more than mere fabric: they were now all-over patterned fields that dominated a composition. In the 1911 still life Les coucous, tapis bleu et rose, for example, the chief function of the vase of cowslips seems to be to pin down the exuberantly decorated blue tablecloth, which looks as though it might otherwise float away at any moment.

The most radical paintings of this period, too, rarely appear on the market. They were assiduously purchased from Matisse by Russian businessman Sergei Shchukin (1854-1936), whose art collection was divided up decades later between the the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow and the State Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg.

The ‘Odalisques’, and comparisons with Picasso

Matisse’s art was often so bold that it drew criticism from his contemporaries. The monumental painting Dance (1909-10) — of five naked figures, with electric-red bodies — was met with jeers and catcalls when shown at the Salon d’Automne in Paris.

‘Without voluptuous pleasure, nothing exists,’ said the artist. Today we associate Matisse with vibrancy, harmony and sensuality. Arguably no series of work exemplifies these three qualities better than his ‘Odalisques’ from the 1920s and 1930s, when he was living in Nice.

Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Nu allongé, 1925. Charcoal and estompe on paper. 15¾ x 20¼ in (40 x 51.4 cm). Sold for $756,000 in Post-War & Contemporary Art Day Sale on 12 May 2023 at Christie’s in New York. © 2024 Succession H. Matisse / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Odalisque, 1923. Charcoal and estompe on paper laid down on card. 12⅜ x 18⅞ in (31.5 x 47.8 cm). Sold for $189,000 in Post-War & Contemporary Art Day Sale on 12 May 2023 at Christie’s New York. © 2024 Succession H. Matisse / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Having fled Paris for the French Riviera at the end of the First World War, Matisse began painting exotic-looking women in richly decorated, indoor settings. More often than not, they were in a state of luxurious repose.

In May 2018, one of these canvases — Odalisque couchée aux magnolias  (1923) — realised $80,750,000 in The Collection of Peggy and David Rockefeller: 19th and 20th Century Art at Christie’s in New York, establishing the world-record price for a Matisse at auction.

The work depicts one of the artist’s favourite models, the dancer Henriette Darricarrère, relaxing on a stunningly green chaise longue as Mediterranean sunlight pours into his studio.

Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Nu allongé (Henriette Darricarrère), c. 1922. Pencil on paper. 9⅜ x 12⅜ in (23.8 x 31.5 cm). Estimate: $20,000-30,000. Offered in Matisse on Paper: Prints & Drawings from the Matisse Family Collection on 5-17 June at Christie’s in New York

‘The Odalisques as a whole are very popular with collectors,’ says Fertig. ‘Aside from their qualities as artworks in their own right, there’s a great interest in terms of the comparison you can draw between the careers of Matisse and Picasso.’ (After the former’s death, in 1954 aged 84, the latter claimed that ‘Matisse left his Odalisques to me, as a legacy’ — and Picasso duly started a set of odalisques of his own.)

Other examples by Matisse sold at Christie’s include Odalisque, mains dans le dos and L’Odalisque, harmonie bleue, which itself set a world record for the artist at auction, back in 2007.

Printmaking: from linocuts to woodcuts, lithographs, etchings and aquatints

Matisse is highly regarded as a painter, of course, but he was also a dedicated draughtsman and printmaker, producing more than 800 prints in a range of techniques, from linocuts and woodcuts to lithography and etching. 


Many of Matisse’s prints, particularly his lithographs such as Figure endormie aux babouches (1929) feature the same lavish detail as his paintings. However, etchings like Tête penchée et bocal de poissons (1929) demonstrate his ability to convey a subject in just a few lines. Praised for his mastery of colour, Matisse was as expressive and versatile in black and white.

Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Figure endormie aux babouches, 1929. Lithograph, on Arches paper. Image: 10⅞ x 14¾ in (276 x 375 mm); sheet: 17⅝x 24¾ in (448 x 629 mm). Estimate: $10,000-15,000. Offered in Matisse on Paper: Prints & Drawings from the Matisse Family Collection on 5-17 June at Christie’s in New York

Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Tête penchée et bocal de poisons, 1929. Etching, on Chine appliqué to Arches paper. 1929. Image: 5⅝ x 7½ in (143 x 191 mm); sheet: 11⅛ x 15 in (283 x 381 mm). Estimate: $12,000-18,000. Offered in Matisse on Paper: Prints & Drawings from the Matisse Family Collection on 5-17 June at Christie’s in New York

He also never stopped learning new printing techniques. He made his first aquatints, for example, in the early 1930s at the age of 62, and did not engage seriously with the medium until his late seventies. These works, such as Nadia au regard sérieux (1948) and Patitcha souriante (1947), with their bold black lines against fields of unprinted white paper, look strikingly like his brush and India ink paintings.

Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Nadia au regard sérieux, 1948. Aquatint, on Marais paper. Image: 13½ x 10⅞ in (343 x 276 mm); sheet: 22⅛ x 14¾ in (562 x 375 mm). Estimate: $20,000-30,000. Offered in Matisse on Paper: Prints & Drawings from the Matisse Family Collection on 5-17 June at Christie’s in New York

Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Patitcha souriante, 1947. Aquatint, on Rives BFK paper. Image: 13⅝ x 10¾ in (346 x 273 mm); sheet: 21¾ x 14⅞ in (553 x 378 mm). Estimate: $8,000-12,000. Offered in Matisse on Paper: Prints & Drawings from the Matisse Family Collection on 5-17 June at Christie’s in New York

Matisse’s prints have a strong market across the board — led by the aquatints, closely followed by the lithographs and then the etchings.

The drawings: a range of price points, and the best way into the Matisse market

Matisse produced several thousand drawings over the course of his career. What typified these were lines that managed to be classically simple yet dreamily unfettered at the same time.

Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Tête, c. 1951. Gouache and brush and India ink on paper. 8½ x 5¼ in (21.5 x 13.4 cm). Estimate: $30,000-50,000. Offered in Matisse on Paper: Prints & Drawings from the Matisse Family Collection on 5-17 June at Christie’s in New York

Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Feuilles de figuier, 1941. Pen and India ink on paper. 8 x 10⅜ in (20.3 x 26.3 cm). Estimate: $15,000-25,000. Offered in Matisse on Paper: Prints & Drawings from the Matisse Family Collection on 5-17 June at Christie’s in New York

The artist himself claimed that drawing was ‘the purest and most direct translation’ of his creativity. According to the late New York Times art critic John Russell, meanwhile, the Frenchman was ‘among the most seductive draughtsmen who ever lived’.

The drawings also offer, for many, the best way into the Matisse market, with works at a wide range of price points. Some drawings fetch prices of a few thousand dollars, others more than a million.

Generally, the highest prices are commanded by Matisse’s charcoal drawings from the 1930s, such as Etude pour La Dormeuse (Le Rêve), and his works made with sweeping lines of Indian ink. It is impossible to appreciate Matisse fully as an artist without giving his drawings the recognition they deserve.

The cut-outs: ‘drawing with scissors’

Drawing was also at the heart of the last, stunning advance of Matisse’s career: his ‘cut-outs’. These consisted of painted sheets of paper, which he cut (with scissors) into forms of varying shapes and sizes, and then arranged into lively compositions.

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In the process, he invented a new artistic medium — though, in a sense, it was just the conclusion of Matisse’s long quest to balance perfectly the formal elements of line and colour. He described the process of making cut-outs as both ‘drawing with scissors’ and ‘cutting directly into colour’.

These works dominated Matisse’s art in the final decade-and-a-half of his life. They appear at auction less regularly than his drawings, but tend to fetch prices at the high end of the works-on-paper market when they do — especially those from the 1950s.

In 2014, the cut-outs were the subject of a blockbuster exhibition at London’s Tate Modern, which later transferred to MoMA in New York. Attracting 563,000 visitors.

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