![A l'Opéra [At the Opera] by Édouard Vuillard](https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Redirect/file/Édouard Vuillard - A l'Opéra (At the Opera) - Google Art Project.jpg&width=1200)
A l'Opéra [At the Opera]
Édouard Vuillard·1900
Historical Context
A l'Opéra (At the Opera) of around 1900, in the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra, places Vuillard's intimate scale and decorative approach within one of Paris's great public spectacle venues — the opera house where bourgeois social life performed itself for its own admiration. Vuillard rarely engaged with grand public subjects, preferring the compressed interiors of bourgeois apartments and the private dynamics of family life; the opera interior here is treated with the same close attention to fabric, pattern, and artificial light that defines his domestic subjects. The NGA's collection of Post-Impressionist work includes this canvas as a rare example of Vuillard operating at the edge of the social world his art usually approached from within rather than as spectacle.
Technical Analysis
The opera interior is rendered almost entirely in dark tones punctuated by the gleam of artificial light on textiles, jewellery, and gilded architecture. Vuillard's characteristic compression of space is amplified here by the theatre's own spatial compression of social class and aspiration, the figures and their ornament merging into a dense decorative field.
Look Closer
- ◆The opera house's red velvet seating is reduced to flat color shapes.
- ◆Individual audience members are suggested by color patches, not clear faces.
- ◆The luminous stage background reverses the normal arrangement of dark and light.
- ◆The hardboard support gives the paint a smooth, dense quality suited here.



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