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| All photographs courtesy
of the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. |
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Henri
Rousseau: Jungles in Paris
National Gallery of Art, Washington
July 16 October 15, 2006
Henri Rousseau: Jungles in Paris
Frances Morris and Christopher Green, eds.
London: Tate Publishing, 2005
230 pp; color illustrations and select bibliography
ISBN-10 1-85437-702-7
The exhibition was also shown at:
Tate Modern, London, November 3, 2005 February 5, 2006
Galeries nationales du Grand Palais, March 15 June 19, 2006 |
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To enter the Henri Rousseau exhibition
at the National Gallery in Washington this past fall was to walk,
in a sense, into a jungle. The door to the show was cut into an enormous
floor-to-ceiling reproduction of Rousseau's The Dream, sending
visitors into a tangle of overgrown leaves and foliage. This was a
clever device: to force a visitor to step physically into a painting,
and into a jungle, not only immediately cued a transformation of environment,
but foreshadowed the themes to come: of dislocation and otherness,
of inside and outside, of vision and bodythemes, in other words,
that are crucial to understanding Rousseau. |
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Henri
Rousseau: Jungles in Paris was a visually exciting, important
exhibition. A collaboration between the Tate Modern, the Musée
d'Orsay and the Réunion des musées nationaux, in association
with the National Gallery of Art, this was the first Rousseau retrospective
in the United States since MoMA's show in 1985, which had a quite
different agenda. That exhibition and its catalogue focused primarily
on Rousseau's influence on vanguard artists of the twentieth century:
he was the rebel, the outsider who represented purity and instinct.
Now that Rousseau's place in the modernist pantheon has been secured,
it seems, we can cast our nets more widely to consider other issuesof
audience, politics, and history. In this most recent exhibition, selected
by Christopher Green and Frances Morris with Claire Frèches-Thory,
there were certainly references to Rousseau's modernism and to his
outsider statuslabels told us that certain works "caught
the attention of the avant-garde"yet the focus was not
so much biography or canonization, but contextualization. What was
being contextualized, specifically, was the artist's jungle paintingsthe
densely packed, enigmatic fantasies painted mostly between the years
of 1904 and 1910. The jungle pictures were understood here not merely
as one artist's quirky fixation, but as part of a broader cultural
phenomenon, namely the French fascination with exoticism during the
nation's colonial expansion. |
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| Fig
1. Henri Rousseau, Tiger in a Tropical Storm (Surprised!),
1891. Oil on canvas. London, National Gallery. |
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| Fig.
2. Henri Rousseau, Promenade in the Forest, c. 1886.
Oil on canvas. Kunsthaus Zurich. |
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| Fig.
3. Henri Rousseau, Carnival Evening, 1886. Oil on canvas.
Philadelphia Museum of Art. The Louis E. Stern Collection. |
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| Fig.
4. Henri Rousseau, Rendezvous in the Forest, 1889. Oil
on canvas. Washington, National Gallery of Art. Gift of the
W. Averell Harriman Foundation in memory of Marie N. Harriman. |
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The first room contained a single
painting, the fantastic Tiger in a Tropical Storm (Surprised!)
(fig. 1). Painted in 1891, this was Rousseau's first jungle picture,
and it shows a tiger recoiling in terror as the wind whips through
the trees and lightning cracks the sky. After its exhibition at the
1891 Salon des Indépendents, the artist took a famously long
hiatus from the theme, not returning to it until 1904. And accordingly,
we do not see another jungle picture after this one until much later
in the exhibition; this first painting was here, as in Rousseau's
career, a hint of what was to come. Perhaps more important, however,
was the psychological effect of this pared-down presentation. Hanging
alone in the dimly-lit room, the painting seemed to glow with tension.
Here was a ferocious creature with sharp white teeth, but sympathetic
also; the lighting fell on wild eyes that looked, terrified, into
the space beyond the picture, as if to mirror the viewer's own reaction
to this ominous setting. This was an exhibition, it seems, in which
psychological effect was key in the curatorial message and thus carefully
manipulated. It presented the French fascination with the exotic with
a certain scholarly distance, yet still allowed for us as viewers
to engage in the thrilling terror of the unknown. |
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Jungles in Paris was not just
about jungles. With the exception of Tiger in a Tropical Storm,
the entire first floor was devoted to works in other genresportraits,
landscapes, scenes of daily life, and political allegories. A section
devoted to the artist's early forest scenes introduced a theme that
recurs throughout Rousseau's oeuvre, especially in the jungle pictures:
unexpected, nonsensical juxtapositions. In Promenade in the Forest,
for example, a wooded scene is made strange by the presence of a well-dressed
woman (fig. 2). With fallen branches, the path is a bit wild for a
mid-day stroll, and her startled, slightly twisted posture conveys
a sense of dread: she is out of her element. In Carnival Evening
of 1886, Rousseau plays even more with the feeling of the unexpected
by inserting two carnival figures in a moonlit forest landscape (fig.
3). The painting has a stage-like quality, and the wooded backdrop
looks like a set curtain that has dropped behind them, heightening
the sense of incongruity. Rendezvous in the Forest likewise
presents an unexpected glimpse of two lovers in eighteenth-century
costume, through an opening in a thicket of trees. Here the woods
become a place of secrecy, and of desire, as they are in the later
jungle paintings (fig. 4). While providing a sense of Rousseau's range,
these first rooms also introduced important biographical information
and insight into his working methods. In particular they emphasized
how his subject matter is drawn from a startling variety of popular
sourcesillustrated magazines, postcards, and photos. |
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Rousseau's work is full of the kinds
of contradictions, deliberate or not, that we see in these early forest
paintings. Indeed the show tended to foreground the notion of contradiction
as a framework for understanding Rousseau and his quirky output: he
was the outsider artist who wanted official acceptance, the painter
of foreign lands who never left Paris, the hero of the moderns who
handled paint like an academician. Even the title, Jungles in Paris,
is a contradiction, one with several possible layers of meaning. It
might refer to the yearly display of Rousseau's jungle pictures at
the Paris Salon des Indépendents, or perhaps to the man-made
jungles he visited in the city's Jardin des Plantes, a literal "jungle
in Paris." More generally, with its semantic nod to improbability,
the title conjures up the irony built into Rousseau's own working
situation: the jungle paintings were the concoctions of a city-dweller.
Like the woman in Promenade in the Forest, Rousseau was out
of his element when he painted the jungle, and the exhibition
gently emphasizes this irony so that we might use it to approach his
paintings, to understand their strange ruptures, their dissonances,
their awkwardness, and their failureor refusalto signify
in a traditional way. |
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One of the most illuminating of the
first-floor rooms contained the artist's renderings of scenes in and
around Paris. The pictures are remarkably, relentlessly un-exotic:
there are scenes of Parisians strolling through the Jardin du Luxembourg,
of families picnicking in vaguely industrialized yet appealing suburban
landscapes, and of a laborer working in an orchard. There are no unexpected
juxtapositions, nothing familiar made strange; rather, each scene
is comfortingly predictable. What is so striking about these pictures
is not just their conformist bourgeois subjects, but the way
in which the subjects exist in their space, and especially the way
in which nature is rendered. In a painting like Avenue in the Park
at Saint-Cloud (1908), for example, nature is not the wild tangle
of foliage that we've come to associate with Rousseau; rather, it
is hyper-organized, symmetricaland most importantly, legible
(fig. 5). Trees stand in an orderly line along the path, like soldiers,
pointing the way to a trite glimpse of an architectural vista. Shadows
fall in a grid-like pattern, further emphasizing the underlying perspectival
structure. Such pictures remind us that Rousseau understood the relationship
between vision and power: in these suburban scenes bourgeois comfort
is conveyed in terms of visual mastery over an organized natural world.
However, neither the wall text nor the essays in the catalogue made
much of what seems to be a crucial difference in the artist's treatment
of nature, in his ability to make it convey either psychological comfort
or terror. |
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In elaborating Rousseau's relationship
with the exotic, this room devoted to the mundane was crucial. In
their quiet orderliness, the suburban pictures set up a striking counterpoint
for the larger, wilder imaginings of terrifying faraway jungles. It
was somewhat disappointing, then, to discover that the next section
of the exhibition was not the jungle pictures but rather the artist's
political allegories. To be sure, Rousseau's politics may be relevant
for understanding the ideologies coursing through the jungle pictures:
he was a nationalist and ardent supporter of the Third Republic. In
works like Representatives of Foreign Powers Coming to Greet the
Public as a Sign of Peace, France is presented as a benevolent
global power bringing peace and civilization to the world (fig 6).
And there were plenty of important pictures in this section, including
the mesmerizing War, which Rousseau painted in 1894 as a general
condemnation of violence (fig. 7). Packed with brutal detailslimbs
are amputated, a bird pecks away at a human corpse, a face with a
bullet wound peeks out between the legs of a neighboring corpsethe
painting spreads out its violence while swiftly condensing it in a
single figure, the personification of war, who is all hair, teeth,
and jagged whiteness. Never has a picture about motion and chaos been
executed in so controlled and static a manner. The violent images
occur in isolated zones which are layered, collage-like, one on top
of the other. The tension between subject matter and style is palpable
here: frozen, rigid forms are at odds with the pathos of the subject,
and the picture never quite makes sense. Perhaps this is its power.
Still, while it was certainly a treat to see this and the other political
paintings, their presence came as an interruption to the show's overarching
themesthe tension between country and city, between foreign
and familiarwhich the previous rooms had done so well to set
up. |
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| Fig.
8. Henri Rousseau, The Merry Jesters, 1906. Oil on canvas.
Philadelphia Museum of Art. The Louise and Walter Arensberg
Collection. |
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| Fig.
9. Henri Rousseau, Two Monkeys in the Jungle, 1909. Oil
on canvas. John Whitney Payson. |
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| Fig.
10. Henri Rousseau, The Football Players, 1908. Oil on
canvas. New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. |
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| Fig.
11. Henri Rousseau, Horse Attacked by a Jaguar, 1910.
Oil on canvas. Moscow, The State Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts. |
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| Fig.
12. Henri Rousseau, Jungle with Setting Sun, c. 1910.
Oil on canvas. Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, Kunstmuseum. |
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| Fig.
13. View of Jungles In Paris installation at National
Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. |
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| Fig.
14. View of installation at National Gallery of Art, Washington,
D.C. |
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| Fig.
15. Henri Rousseau, The Hungry Lion throws itself on the
Antelope, 1905. Oil on canvas. Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/
Basel. |
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| Fig.
16. View of installation showing Emmanuel Frémiet, Bear
Cub Hunter, after 1885. Bronze. Krannert Art Museum and
Kinkead Pavilion, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champagne.
Gift of Mrs. Stacy B. Rankin. |
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| Fig.
17. "Attaqué par un tigre." Le Petit Journal,
cover, 4 April 1909. |
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| Fig. 18. Henri Rousseau,
The Dream, 1910. Oil on canvas. New York, Museum of Modern
Art. Gift of Nelson A. Rockefeller. |
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The promised jungle pictures began
upstairs. The first room contained several of what the organizers
called Rousseau's "idyllic" jungle scenes, which tend to
show animals at rest, peering out from amidst the lush jungle foliage.
Typically these creatures look right at the viewer, wearing vaguely
stunned expressions that function to underline the chasm between the
viewer and the scene represented: their stares communicate that this
is their territory, and you are an outsider. This is reinforced by
the always-present band of foliage in the foreground that denies the
viewer any sense of bodily entry into the picture. The centerpiece
of the room was The Merry Jesters, which shows a collection
of various jungle animals, including monkeys, presented with inexplicable
props: a red back-scratcher and an overturned bottle of milk that
hovers, impossibly, in the foreground space (fig. 8). (Indeed, the
theme of the room was the artist's use of unexpected props, which
explained the hanging of these jungle scenes with works such as the
Portrait of a Woman, whose subject rigidly holds a tree branch.)
In The Merry Jesters, the back-scratcher and milk bottle are
not only unexpected but man-made, and in this way the painting
introduces us to yet another theme in Rousseau's work: the disconcerting
yet often comical overlap between human and animal. The Merry Jesters
was flanked by Two Monkeys in the Jungle, with its human-looking
simians, and the Football Game, with its simian-looking humans
(figs. 9 and 10). |
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The climax of the exhibition came
in the next room, where, suddenly, everything was on a larger scalethe
paintings, the objects, and the gallery itselfand for the first
time we were totally surrounded by jungle pictures. All were painted
between 1904 and 1910, and, unlike the previous room, all dealt with
themes of violence and struggle. The selection included several works
showing animal combat, including The Repast of the Lion, and Horse
Attacked by a Jaguar (fig. 11). There were also paintings with
human combatants, such as Jungle with Setting Sun, in which
the human is made even more exotic than the animal; dark and featureless,
he is a blank symbol of Otherness (fig. 12). With jungle paintings
on each wall, the visitor was thrust into a strange, dreamlike word,
where dramas unfold beneath towering flowers and giant blades of grass.
The paintings are big, packed with details, and it was thrilling to
see so many in one space. |
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What made this section of the exhibition
so effective, however, was the supplementary material presented alongside
the paintings: sculptures, taxidermy, popular imagery, and travel
literature. One wall was covered from floor to ceiling with the illustrated
covers of the periodical Petit Journal, showing images of faraway
lands and life in the colonies (fig. 13). Popular images from other
sources hung alongside some of the paintings. For example, Jungle
with Setting Sun was positioned next to an illustration from the
book Bêtes Sauvages, from which the animal in the painting
was traced. Cases along the walls contained travel accounts and journals
reporting on expeditions, such as the Journal des Voyages.
Walls were decorated with foliage patterns that appeared to be illustrations
from a natural science book or journal, blown up to a life-size scale.
Moving back and forth between these different media, between the paintings
and the supplementary material, the feeling was one of context and
interaction. |
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In the center of the room stood a
large taxidermy animal group made in 1886, "Senegal lion devouring
an antelope," which Rousseau had studied at the Muséum
National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris (fig. 14). On the far wall,
in a prime position for comparison, hung the painting that derives
directly from it: The Hungry Lion Throws Itself on the Antelope,
which Rousseau exhibited at the famed 1905 Salon des Indépendants
with Matisse and the fauves (fig. 15). With the animals set in an
identical position, Rousseau's painting is almost a literal transcription
of the taxidermy; only the wounds, the dripping blood, and wild-eyed
gaze of the lion are the artist's inventions, all of which inject
a spark of life to his dead models. Indeed, the opportunity to reflect
on the "deadness" of Rousseau's source was a kind of revelation.
Seeing the taxidermy in front of the painting, not only do we see
how important such sources were for his work, but we get a different
take on the sense of "stillness" that pervades so many of
his paintings: taxidermy specimens are frozen. Flanking the center
group were two life-size sculptures by Emmanuel Frémiet: his
Gorilla Carrying of a Woman of 1887 and the Bear Cub Hunter,
which Rousseau would have seen at the 1889 World's Fair and at the
Jardin des Plantes, respectively (fig. 16). |
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On the one hand, then, the room functioned
as a straightforward catalogue of Rousseau's sources. The artist had
never gone to Mexico or seen its jungles, as Apollinaire had claimed;
his paintings were shaped instead by visits to botanical gardens,
to the zoo, and to colonial exhibitions. We learn that often his imagery
comes straight out of the Jardin des Plantes, where he worked directly
from stuffed animal displays, and that he sometimes derived his compositions
from journal illustrations. But on the other hand, and perhaps more
importantly, the documentary material reminds us of the ideology out
of which Rousseau's mysterious and often angst-ridden jungle pictures
emerged. In particular the wall of Petit Journal covers was
a powerful document of an era's view of the colonial Other. Scene
after scene of menacing natives and impenetrable forests provided
a first-hand glimpse into the terror and fascination Parisians felt
toward faraway lands (figs. 13 and 17). With foliage on the walls
and life-size battling animals, the room mimicked the natural world
while remaining totally artificial, which was crucial: its artifice
reminded us that what Rousseau had at his disposal was not the real
jungle but the imagined jungle as it loomed in the nineteenth
and early twentieth-century French consciousness. This room reminded
us, in other words, that the exotic is a construct. |
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Standing before the enormous jungle pictures,
one begins to understand how, formally speaking, they articulate the
paradoxes of the colonial era for French audiences. It has to do with
the way they create a deliberate sense of dislocation by playing with
the viewer's visual and bodily experience of the painting. The jungle
paintings pack so much information into the visual field: each leaf
is turned toward us for maximum legibility, details are aggressively
clear, plants seem to line up for inventory. In submitting the exotic
to visual organizationin presenting it as something that is
knowablethe paintings suggest a kind of colonial mastery, and
colonial desire, while at the same time denying it. For despite
their hyper legibility, the paintings are still impenetrable. The
layers of foliage occlude vision, and the unsettling arrangement of
space and the weird shifts in scale make you feel like you've entered
a world in which you can't possibly belong, physically speaking. Rousseau
seems to convey the contradictions and anxieties of the colonial experience
in terms of what the viewer can and cannot see. |
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The exhibition culminated with The
Dream, Rousseau's brilliant submission to the Salon des Indépendents
of 1910 (fig. 18). Here, the desire implicit in the other jungle paintings
is turned outward as a female nude reclines on a red sofa, her body
fully displayed to the viewer. Enormous flowers and vegetation surround
her, while voyeur-animals encroach from all sides, their eyes peeping
through gaps in the foliage. Perhaps more than any other painting,
this one makes the loaded meeting of French and foreign its central
theme, as the European nude is almost comically at odds with her surroundings.
Whether Rousseau was making a particular statement about colonial
expansion is unclear, and the organizers were careful to leave these
kinds of questions open. |
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There is much that Jungles in Paris did
not address. Questions of race and sexuality, crucially related to
the colonialist discourse, were glossed over (though the catalogue
does touch on these issues, particularly Christopher Green's excellent
essay). Still, with its fantastic documentary material, the exhibition
took an enormous step forward in complicating our understanding of
Rousseau and positioning his work in relation to notions of the exotic
that dominated the colonialist era. Most remarkable of all is that
it managed to demonstrate that the exotic is a construct without being
overly didactic or ruining the fun of the paintingswithout,
in other words, stripping the jungle of its mystery. |
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Martha Lucy
Barnes Foundation
mlucy[at]barnesfoundation.org |
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© 20078 Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide and Martha Lucy. All Rights Reserved. |
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