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mysterious I-don’t-know-what
In spite of his strong defence line, Dick Beer did
not stay “modern” very long.
It is quite clear that he was more severely touched by the critics’
arrows than he would admit. In 1920, he definitely ceases to be a cubist,
the compositions are now entirely naturalist, but keeping much of a
mysterious I-don’t-know-what of the epoch (let’s not forget
that Picasso himself returned to naturalism in these years). Dick Beer
is fully representative of European painting in the Entre-deux-guerres,
a keen interpreter of moods such as life disillusions and nostalgic
romanticism. The construction is classic, but what remains of cubism,
his cubism, are the loaded patterns and a sense for the movement under
the forms. Many of his canvases contain now thick layers of oil paint
thanks to the knife technique. There are many symbolist/surrealist elements,
such as strangely lit skies, or details which are not entirely natural
within very classic compositions, a bizarre mixture of ugly and nice,
harmony and disharmony. It is not an “easy”
art. For the art lover attracted by appearance or first impression only,
it is difficult to take in these Entre-deux compositions. We may term
that a new kind of “trompe l’oeil painting”. Let us
consider the portrait Ruth II, from 1922, presented at the commemorative
exhibition in 1942. It looks very classic. But why does the ear seem
unfinished and oddly willowy? And the lips, very thin, largely reveal
a row of teeth caricatured as in a comic strip, an aggressive grin really.
The supposedly clumsy drawing has a meaning. Dick Beer’s wife
Ruth had sharp years, but he himself became gradually deaf while having
been born with a good ear for music. Ruth was ambitious (see the French
expression “avoir les dents longues”),
had a sharp tongue (“avoir la dent dure” in French) and
was good in business, while Dick was hopeless in money matters. Getting
married in 1918, they were separated a couple of years after but remained
close friends. Such a determined woman (see her iron-look in the portrait),
wishing to be protective, could not have been easy to endure for a poor
and cursed painter with a male super-ego.
(Continued)
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