

Christopher C. Gorham, "Matisse at War: Art and Resistance in Nazi Occupied France" (Citadel Press, 2025)
Sep 9, 2025
Christopher C. Gorham, a lawyer and acclaimed author, dives deep into Henri Matisse's extraordinary life during Nazi-occupied France. He illustrates how Matisse's difficult personal circumstances led him to create revolutionary works, using innovative paper cutouts as acts of defiance. Gorham also sheds light on Matisse's family's brave resistance efforts amidst chaos, including his daughter's harrowing experience with the Gestapo. The conversation captures the profound power of art as a form of resilience against oppression during turbulent times.
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Gap In Matisse Scholarship
- No full book has focused on Matisse's wartime years despite major biographies covering his life.
- Christopher C. Gorham positions his work as the first book-length treatment of Matisse during 1939–1945.
Pierre's Letters Unlock Archives
- Gorham found rich source material in Pierre Matisse's letters housed at the Morgan Library in New York.
- Those letters became a foundational archive for reconstructing Matisse's wartime correspondence and family relations.
Matisse At A Crossroads
- By 1938 Matisse faced personal and professional decline: illness, a broken marriage, and waning avant-garde status.
- He increasingly split time between Paris and Nice and was perceived as passé by younger contemporaries.