
Landscape at Vaucresson
Édouard Vuillard·1900
Historical Context
Landscape at Vaucresson of around 1900, in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, depicts the outer Parisian suburb where Vuillard spent time with his close friend and patron Jos Hessel, whose family villa became a regular retreat. Vuillard's relationship with his patrons was unusually intimate: he was embedded in the bourgeois domestic world he painted, a permanent guest who documented the private spaces and social rituals of families who were both his subjects and his primary collectors. Vaucresson represented an intermediate territory between Paris and the country — a middle-class suburban landscape that Vuillard treated with the same absorbed attention he gave urban apartment interiors. LACMA holds this work as part of a French Post-Impressionist collection assembled to represent the Nabi and related movements.
Technical Analysis
The Vaucresson landscape is handled in Vuillard's characteristic late manner: broad areas of modulated colour applied with a paste-like consistency that gives the surface a matte tapestry-like quality. Trees and garden are described through shape and colour adjacency rather than linear contour, spatial organisation relying on colour temperature differences rather than tonal recession.
Look Closer
- ◆Vaucresson's suburban landscape is treated by Vuillard as a decorative surface — the garden's green and the architecture's pale walls are organized as flat color patches rather than three-dimensional space.
- ◆The dappled light filtering through the garden trees creates the shifting light-and-shadow pattern that appealed to Vuillard's sense of surface richness — a domestic light quality entirely different from the raw nature of the Impressionists.
- ◆The human presence in the garden — figures visible through foliage — is barely distinguished from the surrounding vegetation, Vuillard's characteristic merging of person and environment.
- ◆The painting's relatively large scale reflects its origin as a significant commission from a wealthy patron — Vuillard's garden subjects for the Hessels and similar patrons were his most ambitious outdoor works.



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