Fernand Leger, ‘Typographer’ at the Met Museum

Sotheby’s iconic sale last month of Leonard Lauder’s collection is now history, but the collector’s taste in Cubist masterpieces can still be appreciated in the Met Museum’s installation of works he gifted by Picasso, Braque, Gris and Leger.  Here, Fernand Leger’s huge, abstracted painting features a worker dressed in red and wearing a round cap typesetting large red and white letters.  Part of a display that includes a cluster of works presented as they were displayed in Lauder’s own home, the multi-gallery installation gives invaluable insights into the development of early abstraction. (On view at the Met Museum on the Upper East Side).

An abstract painting with forms that suggest a figure in a round hat standing before two large letters.
Fernand Leger, Composition (The Typographer), oil on canvas, 1918-19.

Leave a Comment