Edouard Vuillard
Paintings
The Earthenware Pot
Le Banc Rose
The seamstresses
The Mantelpiece. La Cheminee
Two Seamstresses in the Workroom
Suburb
The Singer
Beneath the Trees
Madame André Wormser and her Children
The Terrace at Vasouy, the Garden
The Terrace at Vasouy, the Lunch
Portraits of Edouard Vuillard by other artists,
Portrait of Edouard Vuillard, Félix Vallotton
The Five Painters: Bonnard, Vuillard, Roussel, Cottet, and Vallotton, Félix Vallotton
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Jean-Édouard Vuillard (11 November 1868 – 21 June 1940) was a French painter and printmaker associated with the Nabis.
Early years and education
Jean-Édouard Vuillard, the son of a retired captain, spent his youth at Cuiseaux (Saône-et-Loire); in 1878 his family moved to Paris in modest circumstances. After his father's death in 1884, Vuillard received a scholarship to continue his education. In the Lycée Condorcet Vuillard met Ker Xavier Roussel (also a future painter and Vuillard's future brother in law), Maurice Denis, musician Pierre Hermant, writer Pierre Véber, and Lugné-Poe.
In 1885, Vuillard left the Lycée Condorcet. On the advice of his closest friend, Roussel, he refused a military career and joined Roussel at the studio of painter Diogène Maillart. There, Roussel and Vuillard received the rudiments of artistic training. In 1887, after three unsuccessful attempts, Vuillard passed the entrance examination for the École des Beaux-Arts.[1] Vuillard kept a private journal from 1888–1905 and later from 1907–40.
Les Nabis and after
Ker-Xavier Roussel, Édouard Vuillard, Romain Coolus, Félix Vallotton, 1899
Le corsage rayé, 1895, National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C., Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon (1983.1.38).
Interieur, 1902, Dallas Museum of Art
By 1890, the year in which Vuillard met Pierre Bonnard and Paul Sérusier, he had joined the Nabis, a group of art students inspired by the synthetism of Gauguin.[2] He contributed to their exhibitions at the Gallery of Le Barc de Boutteville, and later shared a studio with fellow Nabis Bonnard and Maurice Denis. In the early 1890s, he worked for the Théâtre de l'Œuvre of Lugné-Poe designing settings and programs.
In 1898 Vuillard visited Venice and Florence. The following year he made a trip to London. Later he went to Milan, Venice and Spain. Vuillard also traveled in Brittany and Normandy.
Vuillard first exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants of 1901 and at the Salon d'Automne in 1903. In the 1890s Vuillard met the brothers Alexandre and Thadée Natanson, the founders of La Revue Blanche, a cultural review. Vuillardʹs graphics appeared in the journal, together with Pierre Bonnard, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Félix Vallotton and others.[3] In 1892, on the advice of the Natanson brothers, Vuillard painted his first decorations ("apartment frescoes") for the house of Mme Desmarais. Subsequently he fulfilled many other commissions of this kind: in 1894 for Alexandre Natanson, in 1898 for Claude Anet, in 1908 for Bernstein, and in 1913 for Bernheim and for the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées. The last commissions he received date to 1937 (Palais de Chaillot in Paris, with Bonnard) and 1939 (Palais des Nations in Geneva, with Denis, Roussel and Chastel).
In his paintings and decorative pieces, Vuillard depicted mostly interiors, streets, and gardens. Marked by a gentle humor, they are executed in the delicate range of soft, blurred colors characteristic of his art. Living with his mother, a dressmaker, until the age of sixty, Vuillard was very familiar with interior and domestic spaces. Much of his art reflected this influence, largely decorative and often depicting very intricate patterns.
In 1912, Vuillard painted Théodore Duret in his Study, a commissioned portrait that signaled a new phase in Vuillard's work, which was dominated by portraiture from 1920 onwards.[4]
Vuillard served as a juror with Florence Meyer Blumenthal in awarding the Prix Blumenthal, a grant given between 1919–1954 to young French painters, sculptors, decorators, engravers, writers, and musicians.[5]
Vuillard died in La Baule in 1940.
"Le Grand Teddy" painting rediscovery
Le Grand Teddy, 1918, glue distemper on canvas, 150 x 290 cm, the largest of the three paintings commissioned from Vuillard in 1918 for the Paris café "Le Grand teddy"
The Table by Edouard Vuillard, 1902
(See main article: The Grand Teddy tea-rooms paintings)
In 2013 the BBC television program Fake or Fortune? investigated a painting owned by British scriptwriter Keith Tutt, which both Tutt and the previous owners, Mr & Mrs Warren, believed to be a Vuillard. The vertical oval painting, which depicts a café scene, was thought to be one a group of three paintings commissioned from Vuillard in 1918 to decorate a new Parisian café, "Le Grand Teddy", named after American president Teddy Roosevelt. The main painting of the commission, a large horizontal oval work depicting a busy café interior (currently privately owned and kept in secure storage in Geneva, Switzerland) was at the time the only one of the three known to still exist and to have been fully confirmed as a genuine Vuillard. With assistance from art experts, the program undertook an exhaustive investigation and analysis of the Tutt painting, as well as carrying out extensive research to establish the painting's provenance. After submitting all the evidence to the secretive and highly conservative Wildenstein Institute in Paris, Tutt and the Fake or Fortune? team were delighted to learn that the Wildenstein Institute committee that reviewed the work had unanimously declared it to be genuine.
Selected works
The Green Interior or Figure in front of a Window with Drawn Curtains (1891)
Self Portrait (1892)
Woman Sweeping (1892)
Mother and Sister of the Artist (1893)
The Seamstress (1893) at the Indianapolis Museum of Art
The Yellow Curtain (1893)
Married Life (1894)
Under the Trees (from "The Public Gardens") (1894) at the Cleveland Museum of Art
At the Café (c.1897–99) at the Cleveland Museum of Art
Woman in Blue With Child (Misia Natanson with Mimi Godebska, rue Saint-Florentin) (1899)
Le Déjeuner à Villeneuve-sur-Yonne (1902)
Café Wepler (1908–10, reworked in 1912) at the Cleveland Museum of Art
André Bénac (1936) at the Cleveland Museum of Art
Le Grand Teddy (1918)
Recent exhibitions (selection)
May 4, 2012 – September 23, 2012 Edouard Vuillard: A Painter and His Muses, 1890–1940 at The Jewish Museum in New York
January 19, 2003 – April 20, 2003 Édouard Vuillard at National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC
September 25, 2003 – January 4, 2004 Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940) at Musée d'Orsay in Paris
Publications
Vuillard, Édouard; Roger-Marx, Claude (1946). Vuillard: His Life & Work. Paul Elek. OCLC 1237747.
Bonnard, Pierre (2001). Correspondence: Bonnard-Vuillard. Gallimard. ISBN 978-2-07-076076-3.
References
Notes
Thompson 1988, p. 10
Thompson 1988, p. 18
Edouard Vuillard: A Painter and His Muses, 1890–1940 at The Jewish Museum
Thompson 1988, p. 126
"Florence Meyer Blumenthal". Jewish Women's Archive, Michele Siegel.
Bibliography
Thompson, Belinda (1988). Vuillard. Oxford: Phaidon Press. ISBN 978-0-7148-2955-5.
Further reading
The Time of the Nabis, in French and German:
Frèches-Thory, Claire; Perucchi-Petri, Ursula, eds. (1990). Les Nabis (in French). Paris: Flammarion. ISBN 2080109413.
Frèches-Thory, Claire; Perucchi-Petri, Ursula, eds. (1993). Die Nabis: Propheten der Moderne (in German). Munich: Prestel. ISBN 3-7913-1969-8.
Cogeval, Guy (2002). Vuillard – Master of the Intimate Interior. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-30109-3.
Cogeval, Guy; Salomon, Antoine (2003). Vuillard: Critical Catalogues of Paintings and Pastels. Paris & Milan: Skila. ISBN 8884911192.
Roger-Marx, Claude (1990). The Graphic Work of Édouard Vuillard. San Francisco: Alan Wofsy Fine Arts.
Vuillard, Édouard (1985). Édouard Vuillard. JPL Fine Arts. ASIN B00100R0HC.
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