
Coin de table
Pierre Bonnard·1935
Historical Context
Bonnard's table scenes — laden with food, flowers, and the accumulated objects of domestic life — are exercises in extreme chromatic intensity. This 1935 canvas tilts the table surface toward the viewer, distorting conventional perspective for emotional effect: the abundance of color and object becomes an almost overwhelming sensory experience. He worked from memory and drawings rather than direct observation, allowing color to be determined by feeling rather than fact His radical chromaticism and distorted domestic perspective place him among the most formally ambitious painters of the early twentieth century.
Technical Analysis
Bonnard's canvases vibrate with color built from small, variegated strokes applied in a high-keyed palette of cadmium yellows, deep purples, vermilion, and turquoise. He often composed from memory, distorting perspective and scale for emotional rather than descriptive accuracy.




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