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Crisis
and Resolution in Vuillard's Search for Art Nouveau Unity in Modern
Decoration: Sources for 'The Public Gardens'
by Annette Leduc Beaulieu and Brooks Beaulieu |
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| Reproduction, including downloading
of Edouard Vuillard works, is prohibited by copyright laws and
international conventions without the express written permission
of Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. |
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| Fig.
1 Edouard Vuillard, The Public Gardens: "Little Girls
Playing," 1894. Distemper on canvas. Paris, Musée
d'Orsay © Erich Lessing / Art Resource, NY. © 2005
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris |
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| Fig.
2 Edouard Vuillard, The Public Gardens: "Asking Questions,"
1894. Distemper on canvas. Paris, Musée d'Orsay ©
Erich Lessing / Art Resource, NY. © 2005 Artists Rights
Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris |
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| Fig.
3 Edouard Vuillard, The Public Gardens: "Nursemaids"
1894. Distemper on canvas. Paris, Musée d'Orsay. ©
Jean Schormans / Réunion des Musées Nationaux
/ Art Resource, NY. © 2005 Artists Rights Society (ARS),
New York / ADAGP, Paris |
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| Fig.
4 Edouard Vuillard, The Public Gardens: "Conversation,"
1894. Distemper on canvas. Paris, Musée d'Orsay. ©
Jean Schormans / Réunion des Musées Nationaux
/ Art Resource, NY. © 2005 Artists Rights Society (ARS),
New York / ADAGP, Paris |
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| Fig.
5 Edouard Vuillard, The Public Gardens: "Red Parasol,"
1894. Distemper on canvas. Paris, Musée d'Orsay. ©
Jean Schormans / Réunion des Musées Nationaux
/ Art Resource, NY. © 2005 Artists Rights Society (ARS),
New York / ADAGP, Paris |
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| Fig.
6 Edouard Vuillard, The Public Gardens: "Promenade,"
1894. Distemper on canvas. Private Collection, Houston. ©
2005 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris |
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| Fig.
7 Edouard Vuillard, The Public Gardens: "First Steps,"
1894. Distemper on canvas. Paris, Art Market. © 2005 Artists
Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris |
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| Fig.
8 Edouard Vuillard, The Public Gardens: "The Two Schoolboys,"
1894. Distemper on canvas. Brussels, Musée Royaux des
Beaux-Arts de Belgique. © Musée Royaux des Beaux-Arts
de Belgique. © 2005 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
/ ADAGP, Paris |
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| Fig.
9 Edouard Vuillard, The Public Gardens: "Under the Trees,"
1894. Distemper on canvas. Cleveland Museum of Art. © The
Cleveland Museum of Art 2004. © 2005 Artists Rights Society
(ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris |
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| Fig.
10 Edouard Vuillard, Project for The Public Gardens: Le Square
de la Trinité, 1894. Distemper on canvas. New York,
Museum of Modern Art, William B. Jaffe and Evelyn A.J. Hall
Collection. © 2005 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
/ ADAGP, Paris |
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Though the impact of Japanese art
is more readily discerned in the work of Bonnard, the Nabi "très
japonard," it is arguably no less consequential for the art
of his intimate friend and fellow Nabi, Edouard Vuillard. Vuillard's
first exposure to the art of Japan was probably through S. Bing's
review Le Japon artistique (published between 1888 and 1891),
a number of issues of which are still in the hands of Vuillard's descendants.
Bing's superbly illustrated publication introduced an entire generation
of artists to an "art nouveau" that was, as Bing anticipated,
to have a profound effect on contemporary artistic creativity and
innovation.1 While some of Vuillard's slightly older, avant-garde
contemporaries were taken personally by Van Gogh to Bing's gallery
and storeroom to leaf through huge piles of Japanese woodblock prints,2
Vuillard himself probably did not have the opportunity to examine
a comprehensive group of original ukiyo-e prints until Bing's
legendary exhibition opened at the École des Beaux-Arts in
April 1890.3 This unprecedented exhibition, which included
some 725 Japanese woodblock prints and 421 illustrated books, most
likely inspired Vuillard to begin his own ukiyo-e collectiona
collection which eventually grew to include some three hundred numbers.4
It is in large part through the study of Japanese prints that Vuillard
evolved the astonishing formal innovations arrived at in his watercolor
series of the celebrated French actor Coquelin cadet (Private collection).
Vuillard's Coquelin watercolors, depicting the comedian in a number
of his dramatic roles from the 1890-91 season at the Comédie
Française, are exceptional in the artist's oeuvre for their
great verve and freedom of execution. Vuillard's bold simplification
of form, his use of silhouette, unmodeled color and linear arabesque,
indicate the force exerted by Japanese prints on much of Vuillard's
art in 1890. John Russell was the first to remark on the japonizing,
caricatural quality of the Coquelin cadet watercolors, comparing them
to actors prints by Sharaku.5 Although the recent recovery
of Vuillard's unpublished collection of Japanese prints has revealed
that Vuillard owned no prints by this great eighteenth century master,
it is now known that he did own a large number of nineteenth century
actors prints by Kuniyasu, Kunimasu, Kunisada, and Kuniyoshi.6 |
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Vuillard's
conception of pictorial space as well as the use of shifting viewpoints
in many of his paintings executed between 1890 and 1891 owes much
to the art of the ukiyo-e print. In a number of paintings that
Vuillard exhibited at Le Barc de Boutteville in November of 1892,
Vuillard experiments with varieties of station points, and in particular
the vue plongeante or high viewpoint. Vuillard had previously
used a high station point in certain of his 1890 landscapes and at
least once in an important figural composition, the cloisonné
Dressmakers (Private collection).7 Now elaborate
interiors, mainly scenes of women seated around tables, are depicted
from this point of view, permitting Vuillard to imply a considerable
degree of spatial recession without compromising the supremacy of
the picture's surface. Floors and table tops are tipped up so that
they appear to flow uninterrupted into rear planes which are in turn
drawn forward by virtue of their participation in the picture's two-dimensional
ornamental continuum. |
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One of the most forward-looking paintings
that Vuillard chose to show at the 1892 Le Barc de Boutteville exhibition
is his well-known composition Under the Lamp (Musée
de l'Annonciade, St. Tropez).8 In Under the Lamp,
Vuillard again employs the high viewpoint which characterizes a number
of his contemporary scenes, but now without the same consistency:
while the floor and the upholstered armchair in the foreground are
tilted up, as if seen from higher up, the two figures are seen at
eye level, "in elevation." Perucchi-Petri has observed that
this use of different station points within the same picture is commonly
found in 19th-century Japanese prints portraying courtesans in interiors.9
In Under the Lamp, however, Vuillard deviates from these models
in at least one important respect; here, it is not only the two figures
that are seen at eye level, but also the table at which the women
are seated, as well as the walls behind them and indeed the entire
upper half of the picture. In other words, the two viewpoints employed
by Vuillard in Under the Lamp do not overlap one another, but
each is assigned and confined to a single part of the horizontally
divided picture. Crossing from one zone into the other, the viewer
can have the strange impression of having suddenly either stood up
or sat down. |
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The rather covert strangeness of
Under the Lamp is further enhanced by the idiosyncratic handling
of pictorial space. Complementing the two different station points
are two contrasting, co-existent spatial conceptions. In the bottom
half of the picture, the viewer reads Vuillard's inclined perspective
from the lower right-hand corner along a diagonal path established
by the spaced arms of the upholstered chair and legs of the wooden
chair at the left. This diagonal recession is reinforced by the background
wall with double black panels (the second quarter from the left in
the back), the actual disposition of which can be made out with the
help of a jutting corner visible behind and underneath the table.
In the upper portion of the picture, however, indicators of spatial
recession are absent, and here the picture reads naturally from left
to right, and the various planes of the walls flatten into a single
continuous plane which is drawn forward into the picture's surface
largely through Vuillard's projection of dark silhouettes on light
ground and light silhouettes on dark groundeffects of clair-obscur
which combine with these spatial ambiguities, and with the tantalizing
glimpses of the two faces turned away from us, to permeate an ordinary
bourgeois interior with a haunting aura of symbolist mystery. |
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The principal source of inspiration
for Vuillard's adaptation of shifting viewpoint and alternating spatial
conceptions in Under the Lamp is once more to be found in Japanese
woodblock prints. Vuillard's most significant debt is not to Japanese
interior views, but, surprisingly, more to landscapes, and in particular
those by Hiroshige, whose prints make up the bulk of Vuillard's ukiyo-e
collection. Hiroshige's New Shrine at Kanda, from the Famous
Views in Edo series, may have even served as a model for Under
the Lamp, with its space-flattening device of the tree silhouettes
suggesting the dispositions of Vuillard's shadow play. As striking
as Hiroshige's juxtaposition of contradictory spatial systems and
station points may seem in his landscape views, they seem even more
radical when adapted for the impagination of Vuillard's small intimate
interiors. Vuillard's exploratory mutations of traditional spatial
representation become a preoccupying concern of his future easel painting
and will undergo many surprising developments and transformations. |
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During November 1892, in addition
to exhibiting at the Barc de Boutteville, Vuillard also designed a
five-panel folding screen for M. and Mme Desmarais to complement over-door
panels he had painted for their Paris salon earlier that year.10
A noteworthy new feature of the Desmarais Screen is its unconventional
format: five panels of uneven height grouped asymmetrically. From
the beginning of the screen's conception, Vuillard seems to have had
in mind a variant of standard Japanese folding screens. More surprisingly,
there is convincing visual evidence suggesting that a number of Vuillard's
later large-scale, multi-panel decorations also owe an important debt
to Japanese sources. Ursula Perucchi-Petri, in her important study
Die Nabis und Japan11 even speculated that Vuillard's
most celebrated Nabi decoration, The Public Gardens
(1894)12, might have had a Japanese model as its point of departure.
Struck by the absence of any hierarchy among the nine panels of The
Public Gardens (figs. 1-9), as well as by the idiosyncratic rhythms
Vuillard developed to unify his decorative cycle, Perucchi-Petri hypothesized
that Vuillard might have found the dominant pictorial idea for his
decoration in either a Japanese folding screen or a ukiyo-e
woodblock triptych.13 The confirmation and substantiation
of Ursula Perucchi-Petri's intriguing, but hitherto unexplored proposition
is the final goal of the present paper. First, however, we must consider
at some length the difficulties Vuillard experienced conceiving The
Public Gardens and the trying, frustrating circumstances that
ultimately led him to adopt a Japanese folding screen as the prototype
for his nine-panel decoration. |
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The Public Gardens was commissioned
by Alexandre Natanson, co-founder of the Revue blanche and eldest
of the Natanson brothers, to decorate the salon of his sumptuous
Parisian townhouse, located at 60 avenue du Bois de Boulogne, now
74 avenue Foch.14 Though Vuillard's autobiographic summaries
record the Alexandre Natanson panels as painted during August and
September of 1894,15 the first mention of a new decorative
commission occurs in a journal entry Vuillard made as early as January
of that year.16 After this entry, Vuillard writes nothing
in his journal until July 1894, when a visit to the Cluny Museum
has the effect of considerably advancing what still seem to be rather
tentative ideas concerning the art of decoration:
16 July. Visit yesterday to Cluny. Tapestries and missal illuminations.
Calendars. In the tapestries I think that by purely and simply
enlarging my little panel that would make the subject of a decoration.
Humble subjects in these Cluny decorations. The expression of
an intimate sentiment over a greater surface that's all.17
The successful example of the Desmarais Screen is behind
Vuillard's first ideas for the subject of his new decoration. On
a sheet now in the Musée d'Orsay, Vuillard had drawn rough
sketches for nine panels with proportions closely approximating
those ultimately painted for the cycle.18 At this initial
stage, however, the panels clearly propose women in interiors, rather
than public gardens, as subjects. The ensemble would have been something
like an expanded version of the Desmarais Screen. No other
record of this project survives, but by 23 July the subject had
been changed to include at least one public garden,19
and a second sheet, one covered almost entirely with vignettes of
Parisian omnibuses and pedestrians, is the first visual document
to inform us of Vuillard's change of mind.20 In the upper
left-hand corner of this page we make out seven of the Natanson
panels, six of which are seen as if installed in the salon. All
represent garden subjects, but only the seventh panel (just to their
right) remotely anticipates the last panels of the future ensemble,
with tree trunks and a figure below, and the top full of foliage. |
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What Vuillard writes in his journal
during the remaining weeks of July and the first half of August
constitutes a remarkable record of the extreme difficulties he encountered
while painting the picture now known as the Square de la Trinité
(fig. 10).21 These entries demonstrate not only that
the Square was painted just before the definitive series
of The Public Gardens, but more importantly, that Vuillard
originally undertook the picture as the first executed part of the
Natanson decoration. On 23 July, he notes: "Tranquillity of
summer days. No nervousness. In passing by the square complete feeling
of summer not only by the sight. Trees from below."22
Just below this entry are three profile drawings of a seated woman.23
In one the figure is shown holding a child. The following day Vuillard
writes: "I go down to the square. The same woman as yesterday
comes to sit on my bench." A description follows: "dress
with little checks, creases without suppleness, like paper, black
blouse, and old creases without fullness. white apron. quality of
creases small and dry, hair like wet seaweed, hard, mat complexion,
purplish lips today. The pallid child sad from weather. silky hair,
stiff white linen. lead red ribbon. Gray weather. corner more heavily
planted than I thought. Purplish-blue flowers. Impression."24
Vuillard has found both the subject and the setting for his first
panel; and the motifs that he will invent and arrange as he works
to compose the Square will be but formal equivalents or "signs"
of the sensations Vuillard felt while seated on a Paris park bench
beside a nursemaid and her charge. |
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Three days later on 27 July, Vuillard
notes both the purchase of a canvas and the name of the square with
the little park where he has been sketching: the square de la Trinité.
On 2 August Vuillard begins to despair over the slow progress being
made on the Square: "Worthless morning, no work no ideas,
atelier in disorder. I am before the big canvas nailed to the wall
inert, without the will to think. Disorder in my brain... Truly,
as decoration for an apartment, a subject that's objectively too
precise would easily become insupportable. One would tire less quickly
of a textile, of drawings without too much literary precision. Use
a model to sustain one's imagination. The imagination always generalizes."25
But then on 7 August, Vuillard ends his journal entry on a more
positive note: "Nevertheless, yesterday at the end of the day,
facility for what little work was produced; thinking of the big
canvas on the wall, envisage some subjects."26 Just
below these lines, in a tiny pen and ink sketch, Vuillard draws
the nursemaid and baby exactly as they will be pictured in the Square.
Finally, two weeks later, on a page opposite a journal entry dated
21 August, Vuillard sketches a woman in a striped dress seen from
behind and walking toward a woman in a plain dress coming in the
other direction.27 This very vignette also appears unchanged
in the center of the Square. |
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Though the preceding journal entries,
as well as the dimensions and proportions of the Square, leave
no doubt that it was originally destined to be the "grande
toile" of The Public Gardensthat is, to fill
the space ultimately occupied by Conversation (fig. 4)as
it turned out, Vuillard wisely decided against large, close figures
for his cycle, and the picture was never to hang in the Alexandre
Natanson salon. At some point, Square de la Trinité was
sold to Alexandre's younger brother Thadée.28 |
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Chastel, in 1946, eloquently evoked
the texture, colors and composition of the Square: "It
is closely woven like a tapestry, and all is reduced to the gentle,
reciprocal play of two grays, close in tone but different in origin,
a rose and a lilac mauve, a bluish green and a restrained yellow,
which the presence of flowers, benches and figures allows to be freely
distributed. But all this is composed in the easy and graceful envelope
of a finely sustained and very legible arabesque, which knots and
returns the spiral in the fashion of the musical motive in pieces
by Debussy that bear precisely this title."29 The
Square's insistent arabesque winding in and out of depth in
the form of a giant figure eight must have been, along with the arresting
emphasis on the huge foreground figure, among the reasons for Vuillard's
eventual decision to reject the picture; for these dominant compositional
devices must have been seen by Vuillard to result in pictorial autonomy
rather than fostering the continuity which would lead on the viewer
exploring the whole large mural decorationto progress from left
to right, and on to the next panels. |
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On 21 August Vuillard wrote in his
journal: "Received the money from Alexandre. Canvas9m50 by 2m40,
at 3,80=36,10. fixer 1,10. Indian ink 0,60. total 37f,80."30
This provides the terminus postquem for actual work on the definitive
canvases, for which Vuillard has bought enough material to prepare
the eight remaining Natanson panels. Opposite this entry, on the same
page as the two women Vuillard incorporated into Square de la Trinité,
are Vuillard's next ideas for The Public Gardens. Intended
as pendants, the two studies, which are labelled "tapestries"
by Vuillard, correspond to existing paintings. The sketch on the right
is a first and still rough idea for Under the Trees (fig. 9),
and the drawing to its left is an evolved study for a painting known
as In the Tuileries (fig. 11).31 Vuillard's eventual
elimination of In the Tuileries from his decorative cycleit
remained in his atelier until c. 1900is probably the result
of objections not unlike those that led to the replacement of Square
de la Trinité (fig. 10). In the Tuileries draws
the viewer into the picture along a diagonal axis running right to
left and then only slightly reversed to right at the ramp; according
to the preparatory sketches, this right-to-left impulse would have
been reinforced by the foreground figures of the abutting panel at
right. The panel's sense of deep spatial recession was to be balanced
by an equally forceful return to the surface, now left to right, via
the tree foliage painted in the upper portions of the two compositions.
As in Square de la Trinité, the problem here lies with
Vuillard's spatial manipulations. Derived from his easel paintings,
these complicated backward and forward movements, involving one or
more panels, repeatedly violate the integrity of the wall's surface
while failing to generate progression rightwards. Vuillard seems to
be learning, through a process of trial and error, that the experiments
successfully carried out in his earlier decorations, especially the
Desmarais Screen, are inappropriate to a large scale mural
decoration; and that the Natanson's "tapestries" demand
much more than the enlargement of one of his smaller pictures. |
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On 10 September Vuillard wrote to Alexandre Natanson
for more money, presumably to buy more canvas and supplies: "The
panels are emerging from the fog and I am rather satisfied, but my
expenses are exceeding what I thought, could you send me another hundred
francs!"32 The same day Vuillard also devoted an entire
entry in his journal to The Public Gardens.33 In
the course of writing this crucial entry Vuillard reveals the overall
guiding principle of his decoration: "Primary idea: twinkling
decor of highly ornamental leaves. Not this or that particular sensation
of nature, of trompe l'oeil, be wary of these." Earlier
in the same entry, while reviewing the role that gradations of value
are to play in his decorations, Vuillard also comes to a decision
regarding his subjects. He briefly describes six of the Natanson panels:
Conversation (fig. 4), Red Parasol (fig. 5), Promenade
(fig. 6), First Steps (fig. 7), The Two Schoolboys (fig.
8), and Under the Trees (fig. 9). Therefore, by the 10th of
September, at least in Vuillard's mind, Conversation (fig.
4) had taken the place of Square de la Trinité (fig.
10) and The Two Schoolboys (fig. 8) had taken the place originally
to be held by In the Tuileries (fig. 11). This second substitution
is confirmed by a pen and ink sketch in the Musée d'Orsay.34
In the lower right-hand corner of the sheet, Vuillard envisions The
Two Schoolboys (fig. 8) and Under the Trees (fig. 9). Conceived
as a single continuous composition, the two panels are dominated by
a horizontal frieze of tree foliage that much reduces the impression
of spatial recession associated with Vuillard's earlier project. Two
other panels from The Public Gardens can be identified in the
sketch: at left an advanced study for Promenade (fig. 6) beside
an as yet tentative hint of First Steps (fig. 7), and third
from the left, a highly developed, though at this stage reversed,
study for Asking Questions (fig. 2), not mentioned in the 10
September journal entry.35 In the upper right-hand corner
of the page Vuillard indicates the future placement of the panels
in the Natanson Salon, identifying each of the nine pictures by noting
its width in centimeters. On a second sheet now in the Yale University
Art Gallery we find a drawing for one of the gamins, exactly as he
will appear in The Two Schoolboys (fig. 8), and next to it
an early idea for Nursemaids (fig. 3), also not included in
the 10 September journal entry. Though this last composition will
undergo changes, in particular the suppression of the little building,
the drawing is the first to include Vuillard's all-important esplanade
sun patches, one of the principal devices by which Vuillard will direct
the progression through his decorations. |
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Two sheets of pastel studies (Musée
d'Orsay, Paris), originally part of a single large sheet of paper,
show The Public Gardens in their definitive order.36
(The pastels for the first two scenes, Little Girls Playing
[fig. 1] and Asking Questions [fig. 2] are actually on the
verso, another confirmation that their inception was later than
the other scenes.) A second, unpublished, plan for the Natanson
salon in Vuillard's 1894 sketchbook confirms that Vuillard also
planned dessus de porte as part of his decoration (Salomon
Archives). (On the page he has written "dessus de porte
40 de haut, sur 1.63. ") These panels must have been intended
to go over the door and the window indicated by Vuillard as being
at the two ends of the room.37 We also learn from this
sketch that a large mirror came between The Two Schoolboys
(fig.8) and Under the Trees (fig. 9).38 Conversation
(fig. 4), hanging on the opposite wall, would have been reflected
in this mirror. On the basis of this plan we can determine the exact
disposition of the panels: Little Girls Playing (fig. 1)
and Asking Questions (fig. 2) to either side of the door
with Little Girls Playing to the left of the door and Asking
Questions to the right; then moving clockwise around the room
the triptych Nursemaids (fig. 3), Conversation (fig.
4), and Red Parasol (fig. 5) on the second wall, then Promenade
(fig. 6) and First Steps (fig. 7) on either side of the window39
on the next side, Promenade to the window's left and First
Steps to its right, and finally The Two Schoolboys (fig.
8) and Under the Trees (fig. 9) to either side of the mirror
on the fourth wall.40 |
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Vuillard's nine intricately interrelated
and interdependent compositions constitute a rhythmic ensemble freed
from the hierarchic order predominant in nineteenth-century mural
decoration. In 1976, Perucchi-Petri made the tantalizing suggestion
that Vuillard may have gotten the idea for his unorthodox ensemble
from multiple-panel Japanese screens he could have seen at Paris
dealers from the 1880s on.41 In her brief discussion, she does not
propose any particular screen as a possible model.
A celebrated Japanese folding screen, indeed one of the most famous
works of Japanese painting not only in the Paris of 1894 but perhaps
even to this dayand one that Vuillard is almost certain to
have known intimately and must have scrutinized and pondered during
the conception of this workpresents such striking affinities
with The Public Gardens in composition, inscenation and decorative
principles, that these can hardly be coincidental. This screen,
known as the Paravent des Portugais (fig. 12) was first exhibited
at the 1878 Exposition Universelle, where it attracted the attention
of a writer especially admired by Vuillard, Edouard Duranty. Duranty
discussed the screen at some length in his review of the exhibition
for the Gazette des beaux-arts: "M. Guimet has brought
back [from Japan] a very precious screen which allows us to establish
the time periods in the making of Japanese art. The artist has represented
a debarkation of the Portuguese, received by the Jesuits then established
in the country. The Shogun Yeyas, persecutor of the Christians,
some time later had the figures of the Jesuits scratched out. This
screen is incontestably from the end of the sixteenth century, and
it clarifies for us certain points of design such as it was then
understood, and such as it had been practiced previously in Japan."42
In 1883, several years after the Exposition Universelle, Louis Gonse
wrote of the screen in L'art japonais, his pioneering, fundamental
survey of Japanese art reprinted first in 1886 and then again in
1891: "Among the monuments that can be dated to the late sixteenth
century, without a doubt one of the most interesting to have come
to Europe, is the folding screen exhibited in 1878 at the Trocadéro
by M. Émile Guimet. It depicts the arrival of the Portuguese
in Japan and their reception by the Jesuits. The figures are painted
with great finesse…."43 |
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Still recognized by most scholars
to be a late sixteenth or early seventeenth-century namban
screen of the Kano school, the Paravent des Portugais was transferred
with the rest of the Guimet collection to Paris in 1887 and has remained
on view in the Musée Guimet since the museum opened its doors
in November 1889. From the beginning a great favourite with the public,
the folding screen was catalogued by L. de Milloué in 1883
for the first published guide to the Guimet collection: "Sixteenth-century
screen representing the arrival of a Portuguese fleet in Japan. The
admiral is received by the Jesuits. . . On the golden clouds, one
sees the arms of the Mikado (the chrysanthemum) and those of the Shogun
Taïko (the leaves and flowers of the paulownia) who governed
Japan at the time of the arrival of the Portuguese."44
Vuillard was a frequent visitor to the Musée Guimet, whose
didactic purposes and programs were in keeping with certain of the
Nabis' own spiritual ambitions. For the Musée Guimet was not
yet the French National Museum of Asian Art, but rather, in accordance
with the expressed goals of Émile Guimet himself, a "museum
of ideas" devoted to furthering the understanding of world religions.45
As a result, Guimet's remarkable library and extensive collection
of religious documents were the central focus of the nineteenth-century
Musée Guimet. Meanwhile, the oriental works of art from Guimet's
collection were allocated to side galleries, where they were exhibited
primarily to illustrate the spiritual cults of Japan and China. The
Paravent des Portugais was installed with other historical,
non-religious works in the Salle Impériale on the first
floor. On July 23, 1894, that is the very day Vuillard began work
on Le Square de la Trinité, Vuillard records in his
journal having been to the Musée Guimet.46 That
day, however, he notes having looked only at Japanese pottery on the
ground floor. But, as Vuillard encountered problems with pictorial
autonomy and the occidental spatial conceptions associated with his
first panels for The Public Gardens, and as he came to the
realization that these panels failed to establish visual planarity
and generate the continuous decorative surface rhythms necessary to
unify his cycle and lead the viewer from one panel on to another,
he must have returned to the Musée Guimet in search of a solution
to his growing dilemma. Between the middle of August, when Vuillard's
crisis was at its most acute, and 10 September when he reveals in
abbreviated terms the definitive program of The Public Gardens,
Vuillard's journal is silent;47 but it must have been during
these weeks, we speculate, that Vuillard discovered or more likely
re-discovered the Paravent des Portugais and recognized in
the screen the resolution of his crisis. |
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An initial cursory comparison between
the six-panel folding screen (fig. 12) and The Public Gardens
(figs. 1-9) discloses analogous exploitations of a high viewpoint,
of linear rhythms, of contrasting light and dark patterns, of continuous
asymmetrical composition, etc. A more careful examination, however,
persuades us that Vuillard's highly idiosyncratic design has beeneven
more than at first might be thoughtfully evolved from the Paravent
des Portugais; his perceptions have been refocused through the
lenses of modernist innovation in art, permeated with the temper of
his time and place, and above all transmuted by the creative operations
of his own burgeoning pictorial genius. The screen's ornate birds-eye-viewed
body of water, which has been given an elaborately scalloped "shoreline"
by intervening gold clouds, gently flows upward and to the right across
the first two panels. Vuillard's stylized patch of sunlight, which
also spreads diagonally "upward" over an esplanade in the
first two panels of The Public Gardens (figs. 1-2), is an inverted,
light-against-dark version of the screen's motif of black lacquer
against gold. In Vuillard's plein-air adaptation of the screen,
colored shadows cast by intervening though invisible trees (under
which the artist has stationed himself and us), create the equivalent
ornate outlines of his esplanade patches. These patterns are picked
up and continued by visible background trees which have their homologues
in the clouds seen at the top of the screen (fig. 13). Here Vuillard
introduces his most fundamental and pervasive transposition of all,
the transformation of the myriad, raised floral and foliate motifs
that spangle the golden clouds of the folding screen into his "twinkling
decor of highly ornamental leaves," "the primary idea,"
according to Vuillard, of his entire decorative scheme.48
There are further formal analogies to be found in details of the two
decorations. For example, the tall slender tree seen at the extreme
left in Girls Playing (fig. 1) recalls the ship mast in the
first panel of the screen (fig. 13). The tree and the mast constitute
the first important vertical accents in each of the two decorative
ensembles. Similarly, the attitudes and costumes of the figures at
the bottom of the second panel of the screen (fig. 14) have inspired
the poses and spring apparel of the mother and children in Asking
Questions (fig. 2) with the striped, gray-green and solid, rosy-peach
colored pantaloons of the Portuguese men finding their counterparts
in the dresses worn by the mother and her girls. |
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| Fig.
15 Japanese, Kano School, Paravent des Portugais (detail
from panels 4 to 6). Paris, Musée des Arts Asiatiques-Guimett.
© Bridgeman-Giraudon / Art Resource, NY |
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| Fig.
16 Japanese, Kano School, Paravent des Portugais (detail
of the admiral from panel 5). Paris, Musée des Arts Asiatiques-Guimet.
©Daniel Arnaudet / Réunion des Musées Nationaux
/ Art Resource, NY |
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| Fig. 17 Japanese, Kano School,
Paravent des Portugais (detail of the cockerel finial
from panel 5). Paris, Musée des Arts Asiatiques-Guimet.
© Réunion des Musées Nationaux / Art Resource,
NY |
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| Fig.
18 Japanese, Kano School, Paravent des Portugais (detail
of pavilion from panels 5 and 6). Paris, Musée des Arts
Asiatiques-Guimet. © Daniel Arnaudet / Réunion des
Musées Nationaux / Art Resource, NY |
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Moving on, we discover that the principle compositional
features of Vuillard's triptych (figs. 3-5) have been derived from
the lower half of the next three panels of the Japanese screen (fig.
15): Vuillard's wide, crescent-like arrangement of figures is adapted
from the curved procession of Portuguese emissaries, his continuous
picket fence behind the park visitors from the series of vertical
struts seen along the palace facade, and once again Vuillard's background
frieze of shimmering stylized leaves from the scintillating golden
cloud of ornamental foliate motifs that hangs over the screen's procession.
Moreover, a closer inspection of these respective panels reveals that
Vuillard has wittily transposed formal scenes of a late sixteenth-century
diplomatic mission into charming everyday vignettes of public garden
life in late nineteenth-century Paris. The most humorous of these
transpositions is the metamorphosis of the Portuguese admiral, dressed
from head to foot in black with white piping and accompanied by attendants
holding a red parasol and a leashed dog (fig. 16), into the seated
old lady in Vuillard's Red Parasol (fig. 5), similarly dressed
in black with white piping, holding a red parasol in her hand and
the head of a small dog in her lap. Vuillard has even transferred
the large white insignias that adorn the front of the admiral's costume
to the old lady's hat. |
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For his last four panels of The Public Gardens
(figs. 6-9), Vuillard has drawn inspiration from the upper portion
of the last four panels of the folding screen (fig. 15). In Promenade
(fig. 6) the two girls standing together in the foreground and the
meandering sunlight patch call to mind the isolated pair of trees
and the scalloped body of water, now more like a scalloped "tributary,"
seen in the third and fourth panels of the Japanese screen. In another
charming touch, the gold against black cockerel finial with outstretched
wings (fig. 17), seen in the fifth panel of the screen, is transformed
into the little boy with arms spread wide outfitted in black against
an undulating ocher path in Vuillard's First Steps (fig. 7).
In the final panels of both series, the sinuous lines and graceful
rhythms give way to a more geometrical, architectural organization.
Here the dense, rigorously pollarded tree bowers of The Two Schoolboys
(fig. 8) and Under the Trees (fig. 9) are an arboreal adaptation
of the green tiled roofs of the open pavilion and covered walkways
seen in the upper portions of the last two screen panels (fig. 18).
The small, regular roof tiles find their equivalents in the now carefully
ordered mosaic-like leaves of Vuillard's shaved chestnut and elm trees.
The red trim of the roofs has become the turquoise border along the
bottom edge of Vuillard's bowers. And now in the place of the converging
perspective orthogonals employed by Vuillard in earlier sketches for
his last panels, he introduces elements of Japanese perspective. The
disposition of Vuillard's tree trunks along parallel diagonals derives
from the arrangement of the wooden uprights that support the roofs
depicted in the folding screen. Finally, the Parisian ladies seated
in the shade of their natural, open air "pavilion" in Under
the Trees (fig. 9), recall the figures seated and conversing on
the floor of the Japanese pavilion (fig. 18), while in the distance
Vuillard's women in black, who stroll along shady galleries, evoke
the Jesuit priests proceeding along the covered walkways. |
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Vuillard's 1894 decoration constitutes an important,
hitherto unrecognized chapter in the history of japonisme.
Furthermore, with The Public Gardens, the impact of Japanese
art on the evolution of Vuillard's formal and decorative language
reaches its first point of culmination. But Vuillard's choice of the
Paravent des Portugais as a model for The Public Gardens
was governed by more than purely formal and decorative considerations.
Vuillard realized that his choice of the Guimet Screen also offered
him the opportunity to allude to, and in a sense even illustrate,
a major historic and artistic development. For in his Public Gardens,
Vuillard has adopted a rare, early Japanese screen that actually documents
the first, tentative phase of contact between Japan and the West,
as the prototype for a modern European decoration that ultimately,
if covertly, demonstrates the far more decisive and consequential
meeting of Japan and the Occident in the late nineteenth century.
In other words, Vuillard is indirectly drawing a perceptive and instructive
distinction between the superficial influence the Portuguese presence
in Japan had on the traditions of the Kano school as witnessed in
the Guimet screenan impact essentially limited to a fascination
with exotic Western dress and mannerson the one hand, and his
own witty, modernist transpositions and profound assimilation of Japanese
principles of composition and design in The Public Gardens,
on the other. |
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* * * |
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Japanese models will continue to play a critical
role in the conception of Vuillard's later Nabis decorations, especially
those designed for Henri Vaquez (1896), Jean Schopfer (1897), and
Adam Natanson (1899). Before undertaking these later decorative commissions,
however, Vuillard finally came into direct contact with S. Bing, and
under Bing's growing influence, Vuillard was persuaded to participate
in the brilliant art dealer-entrepreneur's ambitious new program for
the revival of the decorative arts. In May of 1894, Bing commissioned
Vuillard, along with other of the Nabis, to design cloisonné
Tiffany stained-glass windows, which were first exhibited at the Salon
of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts on the Champs-de-Mars
in April 1895. The success of the Tiffany stained-glass windows led
Bing to commission major multi-panel decorations from the Nabis for
the inaugural exhibition at Art Nouveau, which opened in December
1895. Vuillard was given a small, model sitting room to decorate.49
The five panels Vuillard painted for Bing's Maison de l'Art Nouveau
constitute what is generally considered one of Vuillard's masterpieces
in the art of decoration. But, perhaps even more significantly, Bing's
commissions afforded Vuillard and the Nabis an occasion to forge a
group aesthetic through what appears to have been Bing's insistence
that the artists' works, however diverse, share a dominant abstract
formal feature: cloisonnisme in the Tiffany stained-glass windows
and, appropriately, the linear arabesque at the Maison de l'Art Nouveau.
Never before or after Bing's direct intervention, were the original
aspirations of the Nabis brotherhood given such harmonious and unified
expression. |
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All translations are by the authors, unless otherwise noted.
1. See Gabriel P. Weisberg, Art Nouveau Bing: Paris Style 1900
(New York and Washington: Harry N. Abrams and the Smithsonian Institution
Traveling Exhibition Service, 1986), 25-28.
2. Ibid., 28-29.
3. "Exposition de la gravure japonaise," Ecole des Beaux-Arts,
Paris, 25 April-22 May 1890. See Weisberg, Art Nouveau Bing,
29-31.
4. Ursula Perucchi-Petri, Die Nabis und Japan: Das Frühwerk
von Bonnard, Vuillard und Denis (Munich: Prestel Verlag, 1976),
215 n. 283 details the contents of Vuillard's Oriental art collection
as follows: 2 statuettes-a seated woman and seated man; 10 flower
paintings-pen and ink, watercolor on silk; 6 illustrated albums,
including Karsushika Hokusai's Manga (vol. 6), and Kitao
Masayoshi's Ryakuga Shiki; woodblocks by Utagawa Hiroshige,
Suzuki Harunobu and others. In 1990, a collection of 180 Japanese
wood-block prints belonging to Vuillard was discovered in the Salomon
Archives, Paris. Twelve of Vuillard's ukiyo-e prints were
exhibited in the 1993 Nabis exhibition. For color reproductions
of four of these prints, see Ursula Perucchi-Petri, "Les Nabis
et le japonisme," in Nabis 1888-1900. Exh. cat. Zurich:
Kunsthaus and Paris: Grand Palais (Paris: Editions de la Réunion
des Musées Nationaux, 1993), 36-fig. 5, 38-fig. 9, 44-fig.
18, 53-fig. 28.
5. John Russell, "The Vocation of Edouard Vuillard,"
in Edouard Vuillard, 1868-1940. Exh. cat. Toronto: Art Gallery
of Ontario (London: Thames and Hudson, 1971), 29, cat. nos. 15-25.
For illustrations in color, see Patricia Eckert Boyer, ed. The
Nabis and the Parisian Avant-Garde. Exh. cat. New Brunswick:
Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum (New Brunswick and London: Rutgers
University Press, 1988), col. Pls. 40-42.
6. Vuillard's collection included woodblock prints by the following
artist: Anonymous (6), Eizan (3), Gekko (1), Hanzan (1), Hiroshige
(77), Hokuba (1), Hokusai (4), Kunichika (4), Kunihiro (1), Kunimaro
(1), Kunimasu (1), Kunisada (45), Kuniyasu (1), Kuniyoshi (15),
Sadahide (3), Sadanobu (1), Shigeharu (3), Shigenobu (1), Toyohide
(1), Toyokuni (1), Toyokuni II (2), Utamaro (3), Yoshitora (3),
Yoshitoshi (1).
7. Antoine Salomon and Guy Cogeval, Vuillard: The Inexhaustible
Glance. Critical Catalogue of Paintings and Pastels (Milan:
Skira Editore and Wildenstein Institute Publications, 2003), 389-97,
cat. no. II-104.
8. Salomon and Cogeval, Vuillard, cat. no. IV-78.
9. Perucchi-Petri, Die Nabis und Japan, 297-98.
10. See Salomon and Cogeval, Vuillard, cat. nos. V-28 and
V-32.
11. Perucchi-Petri, Die Nabis und Japan, 119-20, 133-34.
12. Salomon and Cogeval, Vuillard, cat. no. V-39.
13. Perucchi-Petri, Die Nabis und Japan, 144.
14. For Vuillard's Public Gardens Cycle, see Claire Frèches-Thory,
"'Jardins publics' de Vuillard," La revue du Louvre
et des musées de France 29, no. 4 (1979): 305-12; Gloria
Groom, Edouard Vuillard: Painter-Decorator. Patrons and Projects,
1892-1912 (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1993),
42-65.
15. Edouard Vuillard, Journal I:2, 12v, Institut de France (hereafter
cited as Vuillard journal).
16. "Offer of a decoration, to do whatever I wish. Why not
attempt it, why not want these vague desires, why not have confidence
in these dreams which are, which will be realities for others as
soon as I have given them a prior existence." Vuillard journal,
Jan. 1894, I:2, 66r.
17. Vuillard journal, 16 July 1894, I:2, 44r.
18. Reproduced in Salomon and Cogeval, Vuillard, 394.
19. See sketch in Vuillard journal, 23 July 1894, I:2, 45r.
20. Reproduced in Salomon and Cogeval, Vuillard, 394.
21. Our discovery of a direct connection between Square de la
Trinité and The Public Gardens, as well as the
actual identity of the squarepreviously unknownwere
published without our being credited by Guy Cogeval and Kimberly
Jones, Edouard Vuillard. Exh. cat. Washington: National Gallery
of Art (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003), 176 and Salomon
and Cogeval, Vuillard, 387-88. Our findings were included
in our manuscript, "Rediscovering Vuillard," copies of
which have been on deposit in both the Salomon Archives and the
Wildenstein Institute since May 1996. Our manuscript was copyrighted
several months before the publication of either the Vuillard exhibition
catalogue or the catalogue raisonné.
22. Vuillard journal, 23 July 1894, I:2, 45r.
23. Reproduced in Salomon and Cogeval, Vuillard, 388.
24. Vuillard journal, 24 July 1894, I:2, 45v.
25. Vuillard journal, 2 Aug. 1894, I:2, 47r-v.
26. Vuillard journal, 7 Aug. 1894, I:2, 48r.
27. Vuillard journal (after 30 Aug. 1894), I:2, 49r. Reproduced
in Groom, Vuillard, 59.
28. Gloria Groom (Vuillard, 43-46) begins her chapter, "Women,
Children and Public Parks," with Square de la Trinité,
a picture which she separates from the The Public Gardens
cycle and presents as a separate commission. According to Groom,
Misia and Thadée Natanson, who married in 1893, commissioned
the Square as a "kind of wedding gift to themselves."
Groom, however, does not cite any evidence in support of her hypothesis.
Indeed, she is perplexed by the painting's monumental scale. There
are no known photographs or paintings showing the Square
hanging in the Natanson rue Saint Florentin apartment.
29. André Chastel. Vuillard: 1868-1940 (Paris: Librairie
Floury, 1946), 52-53.
30. Vuillard journal, 21 Aug. 1894, I:2, 48v.
31. Groom (Vuillard, 52, 58) was the first to recognize
the connection between the sketch in Vuillard's journal and In
the Tuileries. Groom errs, however, in re-titling the picture
Au Luxembourg. We are in the Tuileries Gardens looking west
toward the place de la Concorde. The ramp that appears in the picture
is that in the northwest corner leading up to the Jeu de Paume (on
the right). This error is repeated by Perucchi-Petri in Nabis
1888-1900, 337, cat. no. 168.
32. Vuillard to Alexandre Natanson, 10 September 1894, formerly
Art Market. Location unknown.
33. This essential document of the rapidly coalescing program of
the cycle already posits the themes of six of the nine panels:
10 September. Suppleness in the general lines, preserve the
linear character of each panel, the values will give the principal
general harmony.
Detail: the stuffs, the foliage different values, giving the lightness
and transparency in the latter; opacity, dryness of the former,
here and there a few hard values harder still tree trunks, hats,
parasols umbrellasabsorb more and more of the subject, arrive
at a literary description. That is hard for me but it must be
decided boldly.
In the middle
poplars the oak
Conversation [Conversation, fig. 4] at right the fat old
lady [Red Parasol, fig. 5 ], the little girls [Promenade,
fig. 6],
plane trees and red-berried trees,
plane trees and elms
the border of the esplanade [First Steps, fig. 7],
elms and chestnut
the esplanade 1 the gamins [The Two Schoolboys, fig. 8],
elm and chestnut
the esplanade 2. the little girls under the trees and conversation
[Under the Trees, fig. 9].
sensation of linens, stuffs, hair, shocks of hair, manes, different
skins.
Primary idea: twinkling decor of highly ornamental leaves. Not
this or that particular sensation of nature, of trompe l'oeil,
be wary of these" (Vuillard journal, 10 Sept. 1894, I:2, 50r.)
34. The Orsay pen and ink and pastel studies were published in
Frèches-Thory, "Jardins publics," 308-10. For reproductions
in color, see Groom, Vuillard, 60-61.
35. Reproduced in Groom, Vuillard, 53.
36. See note 34.
37. See Salomon and Cogeval, Vuillard, nos. V-39.10 and
V-39.11
38. On another page of the 1894 sketchbook, Vuillard has indicated
"38 + 1m62, dessus de porte. Cadre de la glace, 2,20 long
h 2,04. " Salomon Archives, Paris.
39. On 16 December 1898, Vuillard took Signac and Théo van
Rysselberghe to see three of his decorative cycles, chez Jean Schopfer,
Dr. Henry Vaquez, and Alexandre Natanson. Upon seeing The Public
Gardens Signac complained, "At the Natansons there are
two decorative panels hung against the light, totally invisible,
because he [Vuillard] failed to take into account the obscurity
created by the luminous contrast of the windowand he limited
himself to a range of colors that was too dark" (Cited in John
Rewald, "Extraits du journal inédit de Paul Signac,"
Part 3, "1898-1899," Gazette des beaux-arts 42,
nos. 1014-15 [July-Aug. 1953]: 36).
40. This installation of The Public Gardens was first proposed
by Claire Frèches-Thory, "Jardins publics," 308.
Curiously, however, Frèches-Thory believed that the cycle
began with The Two Schoolboys and Under the Trees
and not with Little Girls Playing and Asking Questions.
41. Perucchi-Petri, Die Nabis und Japan, 144.
42. Edmond Duranty, "L'Extrême Orient à l'Exposition
Universelle," Gazette des beaux-arts 18 (Dec.1878):
1012-14. Excerpted and translated in Michael Komanecky, The Folding
Image: Screens by Western Artists of the Nineteenth and Twentieth
Centuries. Exh. cat. (New Haven: Yale University Art Gallery,
1984), 49.
43. Louis Gonse, L'art japonais, vol. 1 (Paris: A Quantin,
1883), 208.
44. L. de Milloué, Catalogue du musée Guimet.
Première partie: Inde, Chine et Japon (Lyon: Imprimerie
Pitrat Ainé, 1883), 269.
45. Francis Macouin and Keiko Omoto, Quand le Japon s'ouvrit
au monde (Paris: Gallimard/Réunion des Musées
Nationaux, 1990), 88-90.
46. The full entry reads "Musée Guimet poteries japonaises"
(Vuillard journal, 23 July, 1894, I:2, 44v). Though Vuillard had
not yet recognized the screen as a model for his decoration, this
concurrence leaves no doubt that he was at the Musée Guimet
in search of inspiration for his Public Gardens.
47. See note 33. The Musée Guimet remained open with regular
hours during the entire summer.
48. See note 33. Milloué's 1890 guide to the Musée
Guimet does not include an illustration of the Paravent des Portugais,
but it does reproduce the arms of the Shogun Taïko, the very
paulownia leaf and flower motif that pervades the clouds of the
screen.
49. Annette Leduc Beaulieu and Brooks Beaulieu, "The Thadée
Natanson Panels: A Vuillard Decoration for S. Bing's Maison de l'Art
Nouveau," Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide 1, no. 2
(Autumn 2002). Retrieved on 23 September 2003 from http://www.19thc-artworldwide.org/autumn_02/articles/beau.shtml.
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