Brancusi is with Rodin, his opposite, the most important sculptor of the 20th century. Born in Romania he will meet Modigliani in Paris where he settles in 1904 and where he will also become a close friend of Marcel Duchamp. The core of his work is made of heads, women or muses, birds and animals, sensuous egg-shaped and slender artefacts: his art was a quest for the "deep meaning of things". France, which he first scandalized, honored him later on while Romania celebrated his genious by asking him to build the huge Tirgu-Jiu ensemble out of which stems the legendaru "Endless Pillar". All of his life, Brancusi, lonely father figure, polished, refined, repeated, dispaced and constantly photographed sculptures and pedestals wich he will donate to the French State. Brancusi's studio was entirely rebuilt in front of the Beaubourg Eontemporu Art Museum in Paris and can be visit.
The Studio
on Impasse Ronsin
I Youth
A Dual Culture: Eastern and Popular
An "Initiate" in Search of Adventure
Photographic Mise en Scene
Wood: the Great Discovery
First Major Work: The Prayer
Sheer Emotional Power: The Kiss
II Maturation
Intense Experimentation
Modigliani and "Negro" Art
Sleeping Muse and the Ovoid Faces
Maiatra, the Fabulous Bird
Life in Montparnasse,
Mademoiselle Pogan
III First Successes
The Forst Solo Exhibition and the Beginnings of a Reputation
The First Step: an Ambiguous Return to Africa
The First Endless Column
Return to the Ovoid: The Newborn
The Princesse X Sca nda I
IV Soaring
Birds and a Bestiary
Ouchamp, Friendship and Love Affairs
Paul Morand: Brancusi, "A Sculptor of the People"
Big Cocks
Brancusi v.s. Unites States Trial
Nancy Cunard, a "Sophisticated Young Woman"
Three Birds Move into Indore
V Apotheosis
Tirgu-Jiu
A New Bird and Variants on The Kiss
Peggy Guggenheim Remembers
Ionesco's The Ehoirs in Brancusi's Studio
A Place of Magic Lost
Notes
Bibliography