winter garden with peacock
Édouard Vuillard·1940
Historical Context
Painted in 1940, near the end of Vuillard's long career, this winter garden scene with a peacock belongs to his final decade of domestic and decorative subjects. Vuillard had spent forty years exploring the intimate interior — rooms layered with pattern, textiles, and the presence of figures absorbed into their surroundings — but his late work increasingly moved outdoors while retaining his characteristic visual density. The peacock, with its spread tail transforming the garden into an ornamental composition, suited Vuillard's instinct for surfaces where natural pattern and decorative intention converge. The Musée de Picardie's collection preserved this late work, a painting that demonstrates Vuillard's continued pictorial confidence even as the political world collapsed around him.
Technical Analysis
Oil on canvas or board. Late Vuillard employs a more open, luminous palette than his Nabi-period interiors, though surface complexity remains — the peacock's plumage and winter foliage create interlocking pattern zones. Paint application is assured and relatively fluid compared to his earlier impastoed decorative panels.
Look Closer
- ◆The peacock's iridescent tail trails through the winter garden rather than being spread in display.
- ◆Vuillard's pattern-merging blends the garden's foliage into near-abstract webs of mark and color.
- ◆The winter palette is muted — grays, olive greens, pale yellows.
- ◆The composition's edges are unresolved, as if the garden extends beyond the frame indefinitely.



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