
Nature Morte Aux Roses
Édouard Vuillard·1907
Historical Context
Painted in 1907, this work belongs to Vuillard's Intimist period, when he was the leading Nabi painter of domestic life. The Nabis — a group including Bonnard, Denis, and Vallotton — took Gauguin's flat Synthetism and applied it to intimate modern subjects, creating a painting of extraordinary formal compression. Vuillard's contribution was the most radical: interiors where the distinction between figure and decorative ground nearly disappears, creating a world of dense, absorbing pattern His integration of figure and decorative environment — a signature of his Intimist vision — made him one of the most formally inventive painters of the Nabi generation.
Technical Analysis
Vuillard's interiors flatten figure and decor into densely patterned surfaces where human forms merge with wallpaper, textiles, and furnishings. His technique involves small, mosaic-like strokes of muted, earthy color — ochres, rusts, olive greens, dusty pinks — creating an intimate, claustrophobic



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