Culture | Rising up to heaven

How Alberto Giacometti became a legend

The fragile, heroic figures on show in New York are as compelling now as when they were made

The legend in his lair
|NEW YORK

THE man strides forward, bent slightly at the waist as if resisting a stiff breeze. He is not so much gaunt as spectral, stretched out like chewing gum, as insubstantial as smoke. And yet, despite his frailty, he is determined, even heroic. “Walking Man I”, a bronze made by Alberto Giacometti in 1960, is a searing monument to an era of anxiety, and a symbol of endurance in the face of overwhelming odds.

During his own life Giacometti, who was born in Switzerland in 1901, sometimes seemed too outmoded and idiosyncratic to win acclaim. But his reputation has continued to grow while those of his contemporaries, who clung to modernist orthodoxy, have faded. Today his humanity and pathos appeal to audiences in a way that more formal sculptors cannot. A flurry of recent activity has solidified his place among a small group of artists, including Pablo Picasso and Frida Kahlo, whose work and persona have seeped into public consciousness.

This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Rising up to heaven”

Kim Jong Won

From the June 16th 2018 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Culture

The controversial cult of the host club in Japan

Why women pay men in make-up to flatter them

The hit series “Bridgerton” has set off a string-quartet boom

It is a surprising example of how popular culture can shape consumer habits


What if calling someone stupid was a crime?

Lionel Shriver imagines cancel culture going to even greater extremes