Georges Rouault
Shin Gallery
68 Orchard Street
New York, NY 10002
Shin Gallery, in collaboration with Skarstedt, is proud to present a major exhibition dedicated to Georges Rouault, a pivotal yet often overlooked figure of Modernism. This landmark exhibition—years in the making—brings together a significant collection of Rouault’s works, emphasizing his explorations of spiritualism, existentialism, and the metaphysical in modern art.
For decades, Rouault’s distinctive approach has set him apart from his contemporaries. His use of bold contours, stained-glass-inspired luminosity, and deeply humanistic subjects positioned him as a singular force in the evolution of twentieth-century painting. This exhibition seeks to rekindle discourse around Rouault’s legacy and reintroduce his work to new generations of collectors, scholars, and institutions.
Rouault’s oeuvre defies the conventional narratives of Modernism. While many of his peers embraced irreverence and radical individualism, Rouault pursued a different path—one that infused modernist form with profound spiritual and ethical inquiry. His clowns and prostitutes, painted with the same reverence as his priests and Christs, challenge the hierarchies of religious representation. By adopting the visual language of stained glass, he transcended the boundaries of sacred and secular, dissolving distinctions between the earthly and the divine.
Rouault’s vision was shaped by a profound moral imperative—one that sought not merely to reflect the world but to reform it. Works such as Acrobates XIII (1913) and Clown Anglais (1937) reveal his enduring empathy for society’s outcasts, elevating clowns and circus performers to symbols of resilience and dignity. Meanwhile, in Fille (Femme aux Cheveux Roux) (1908) and Le Fugitif (1945-46), Rouault turns his piercing gaze toward themes of injustice and human frailty, channeling his craft into a polemical yet deeply compassionate art. The exhibition also features masterworks like Deux Juges (1937) and Satan (1929-39), where his vehement, almost belligerent brushwork wages a quiet war against corruption and moral decay. Through layers of incandescent color framed by bold, black contours, Rouault achieves an epic sweep and power rarely matched in modern painting—an art of the people, speaking in the vernacular of the human heart.
Rouault’s stylistic evolution mirrors his search for an authentic artistic expression of faith. Early works reveal the influence of academic tradition, yet by 1905, he had broken free, embracing a bold expressionism that fused color and form with startling immediacy. His study of Cézanne encouraged a move toward coherence and abstraction, liberating his figures into expansive, imaginative spaces. Though his luminous palette and thick black outlines reveal his deep study of stained glass, Rouault’s method also owes a debt to the reverence of craft inherited from his artisan father, a devotion to material and moral integrity that persisted throughout his career. In this, Rouault remained a solitary force: a one-man revolution whose passionate, unvarnished art continues to blaze with vitality.
Through this exhibition, we seek to revive and extend discussions on the spiritual function of art in the post-war era, shedding light on a Modernist who did not merely depict faith but reimagined it for the modern world.