Henri Matisse
French, 1869–1954
Matisse was then able to travel widely and to enjoy a measure of material comfort. By 1909 he moved his household to a comfortable house at Issy-les-Moulineaux outside Paris, at first renting and then buying the property in 1913. In 1917 he began to winter in Nice, on the Côte d'Azur, a region frequented largely by wealthy English and American tourists. Matisse divided his time between Paris, Nice, and travel elsewhere for the remainder of his life.
In 1925 Matisse was named Chevalier of the Legion of Honor. In 1930 his work was featured in important exhibitions in New York and Berlin; and he traveled within the United States while en route to Tahiti. Also, in 1930 Matisse returned to America to jury an exhibition at the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh, and made a third visit in conjunction with the mural commission he accepted from Albert C. Barnes, outside Philadelphia. He had two influential retrospective exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, New York (1931, 1951); coinciding with the latter, Alfred Barr, founding director of the Museum of Modern Art, published his influential text, Matisse: His Art and his Public. Matisse, then in failing health, developed his late cutout technique in designs for the Chapel of the Rosary at Vence (France), consecrated in the summer of 1950. Matisse executed designs for other large decorative projects in the last years of his life, including his last work, a window for Union Church in Pocantico Hills, New York, commissioned by Nelson Rockefeller in 1954. The artist died in Nice on 3 November 1954.