
Blue Nude (Souvenir de Biskra)

Meet the artist

Dates
1907
Specifications
- Original title
- Nu bleu, Souvenir de Biskra
- Dimensions
- 92.1 × 140.3 cm
About the Artwork
Blue Nude (Souvenir de Biskra) depicts a female figure reclining in a lush, stylized landscape, her body rendered in bold blue tones and heavy dark outlines. The pose is deliberately awkward, with limbs arranged in angular, almost sculptural forms that challenge conventional ideals of beauty. Palm fronds arc behind her, evoking the North African oasis town of Biskra that Matisse had recently visited.
Matisse created this painting in 1907 after a clay sculpture he was working on collapsed. Channeling his frustration into paint, he produced a work that shocked audiences at the Salon des Independants and drew fierce criticism for its aggressive distortion of the female form. The painting proved enormously influential: it is widely credited with spurring Picasso toward the radical fragmentation of Les Demoiselles d'Avignon later that same year. At the 1913 Armory Show in Chicago, the painting was so controversial that students burned it in effigy.
Don’t stop here
More to explore by Henri Matisse
Same feeling, different artists













