“Drawing is feeling. Color is an act of reason.”
Pierre Bonnard
Pierre Bonnard
In compliance with his father’s
wishes the French artist Pierre
Bonnard studied law at university and in 1889 became a lawyer. It was to be
a short lived career move for in the same year Bonnard won a competition to
design a poster for a French champagne company. With the proceeds from the
competition Bonnard abandoned the law and set up a studio in Montmartre with
several friends including the formidable post impressionist artist Henri Toulouse-Lautrec
who he introduced to commercial poster production.
Along with Maurice Denis and Édouard Vuillard these young artists
supported themselves producing stage settings and costumes for the Théâtre d’Art, the Théâtre Libre and for the Théâtre
de l’Oeuvre.
Seven years after his
competition win Bonnard had his first solo exhibition at the gallery run by the
impressionist collector and dealer Paul
Durand-Ruel. Often referred to as a late impressionist and
whilst being friends with both Monet and Renoir, Bonnard’s works differ in both
intention and execution.
Bonnard
was a studio painter working from memory using sketches and to a lesser extent
photography as memory aides. His compositional points of view were often
dramatic forcing the audience into the role of voyeur. But color was his
predominant concern, as he has stated “It
is still color; it is not yet light.”
It is said that when Bonnard
had mixed a color he particularly liked he would touch up other ‘finished’ paintings
in his studio. And reportedly, he once had his friend Édouard Vuillard
distract a museum security guard while he touched up a painting on display he
had painted several years earlier.
In
his critique of a 1947 retrospective exhibition of Bonnard’s work, the art
critic Christian Zervos said "In
Bonnard's work, Impressionism becomes insipid and falls into decline."
To which the artist Henri
Matisse responded "Yes! I maintain that
Bonnard is a great artist for our time and, naturally, for posterity."
And as history would seem to
have it the artist’s opinion is far more astute than that of the critic.
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