
Madame Vuillard remplit une carafe
Édouard Vuillard·1900
Historical Context
Madame Vuillard Remplit une Carafe of around 1900, at the Fitchburg Art Museum, depicts Vuillard's mother Marie — the most important person in his life and the most recurring subject of his art — engaged in a simple household task, filling a carafe with water. Vuillard lived with his mother for most of his adult life, and she appears in dozens of his paintings across every period, always absorbed in the practical work of maintaining their shared domestic space. The act of filling a carafe — entirely private, entirely without social performance — is exactly the kind of unposed domestic moment that Vuillard's art sought to capture with observational intimacy. The Fitchburg Art Museum in Massachusetts holds a collection of French and American art that includes this small but characteristic work.
Technical Analysis
The kitchen or dining room setting is compressed into a tight arrangement of pattern and colour where the figure of Madame Vuillard is almost absorbed into the surrounding furnishings and wall surfaces. This deliberate visual integration of person and domestic environment is Vuillard's signature pictorial strategy, expressing the deep identification of his mother with the shared domestic space.



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