Who speaks of art speaks of poetry.There is no art without a poetic aim. There is a species of emotion particular to painting. There is an effect that results from a certain arrangement of colours, of lights,of shadows. It is this that one calls the music of painting.
The long and illustrious career of Edouard Vuillard spans thefin-de-si&le and the first four decades of the twentieth century, during which time the French painter, printmaker, and photog-rapher created an extraordinary body of work.This is the first volume to explore Vuillard's rich and varied career in its totality, presenting nearly 350 works that demonstrate the full range of his subject matter and reveal both the public and pri-vate sides of this quintessentially Parisian artist.In a series of gloriously illustrated essays and catalogue entries, the authors explore Vuillard's complex and diverse artistic development, begin-ning with his academic training in Paris in the late 188os and the innovative Nabi paintings of the 1890s for which he is best known, including his provocative, disquieting middle-class interiors and his work associated with the avant-garde theatre. The authors also examine Vuillard's splen-did but lesser known large-scale decorations, his luminous landscapes, and the elegant portraits from the last decades of his career. In addition to paintings, the volume includes a substantial selec-tion of drawings and graphics, together with a large group of striking photographs by the artist,many of which are published here for the first time This beautifully illustrated catalogue accompanies the most comprehensive exhibition ever devoted to the work of Edouard Vuillard (1868-I94o).The exhibition opens at the National Gallery of Art in Washington and travels to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the Galeries nationales du Grand Palais in Paris, and the Royal Academy of Arts. London.
Backward Glances
Guy Cogeval
Permanent Transgression
Nos
Vuillard Onstage
Nos
Behind Closed Doors
Nos
The Decorative Impulse
Nos
The Turning Point
Nos
Vuillard and His Photographs
Nos
The Triumph of Light
Nos
Tradition, Genre, Modernity
Nos
"I Don't Paint Portraits"
Nos
Vuillard and Ambiguity
Dario Gamboni
The Intentional Snapshot
Elizabeth Easton
Vuillard and the "Vill6giature"
Kimberly Jones
Vuillard between Two Centuries
Laurence des Carx