Paris Olympics in 1924 inspires new exhibition



BBC_ An exhibition inspired by the Paris Olympic Games in 1924 will reveal how international artists engaged with the themes of the sporting body a century ago.

The event was the first truly international games, according to curators.

A letter sent by American long jumper William DeHart Hubbard, the first black athlete to win an Olympic gold medal in an individual event, is among rare loans on display.

The exhibition at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge has been timed to open a week before the Paris 2024 Games begin.

The exhibition includes a letter from the first black athlete to win an Olympic gold in a single event - US long jumper William DeHart Hubbard

The University of Michigan student wrote the letter to his mother aboard the SS America, as he was about to sail to Paris


t also features works from leading modernist artists such as Pablo Picasso, Diego Rivera, Natalia Goncharova and Umberto Boccioni.

Their works are shown alongside classical sculpture, as well as posters, fashion and photography from the "Roaring Twenties" - a decade that saw dramatic economic and social change.

Artwork inspired by the sportsmen and women will feature alongside posters from the 1924 Games

Jacqueline Marval went from painting the classical nude to painting the bather in the 1920s, after she discovered French holiday resort Biarritz


The 1924 Games was the first to broadcast radio commentaries and advances in training, clothing and equipment helped athletes break new records.

Olympians also became celebrities in their own right. Swimming superstar Johnny Weissmuller became a Hollywood star after winning gold, and American tennis player Helen Wills became the first woman athlete to become a global celebrity.

The exhibition will also feature a less well-known part of Olympic history - the art competitions incorporated in the Games between 1912 and 1948.

The 1924 Olympics helped make US gold medal winning tennis player Helen Willis a global celebrity, inspiring sculptor Alexander Calder (above)