Índice
Resumen biográfico
- Copyright status: Public domain
- Nationality: Francia
- Also known as: Vuillard
- Creative periods: mature period
- Gift suitability: other-none
- Room fit: salón principal
- Mediums: óleo sobre lienzo
- Movements: post-impressionism
- Died: 1940
- Lifespan: 72 years
- Museums on APS:
- Instituto de Arte de Chicago
- Instituto de Arte de Chicago
- Instituto de Arte de Chicago
- Instituto de Arte de Chicago
- Instituto de Arte de Chicago
- Más…
- Typical colors: madera de deriva
- Works on APS: 444
- Top-ranked work: Interior, Madre y Hermana del Artista
- Art period: Siglo XIX
- Emotional tone: contemplativo
- Vibe: nostalgia evocadora
- Color intensity:
- vívido
- equilibrado
- Best occasions: acento cromático
- Top 3 works:
- Interior, Madre y Hermana del Artista
- El Cortinamarillo
- Born: 1868, Cuiseaux, Francia
Test de arte
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early life and artistic beginnings
Jean-Édouard Vuillard (1868–1940) was a french painter, decorative artist, and printmaker. His life's work would later become a cornerstone of the avant-garde artistic group les nabis, alongside fellow visionaries like Maurice Denis and Édouard Vuillard. This collective would revolutionize the art world with their innovative approach to color and form.
Vuillard was born on november 11, 1868, in cuiseaux, france. His father was a civil servant, and his mother, a seamstress. He showed an early aptitude for drawing and painting, studying art from 1886 to 1888 at the Académie Julian and the École des Beaux-Arts in paris.
In 1889 he joined a group of art students that included Maurice Denis, Pierre Bonnard, Paul Sérusier, Ker-Xavier Roussel, and Félix Vallotton. They called themselves les Nabis (Hebrew for “Prophets”), and they drew their inspiration from the Synthetist paintings of Paul Gauguin’s Pont-Aven period.
the nabis movement and its influence
Like Gauguin, the Nabis advocated a symbolic, rather than a naturalistic, approach to color, and they usually applied their paint in ways that emphasized the flat surface of the canvas. Their admiration of japanese woodcuts, which were then in vogue in europe, inspired them to use simplified shapes and strong contours.
Les nabis, a group of young french artists active in paris from 1888 until 1900, played a large part in the transition from impressionism and academic art to abstract art, symbolism, and the other early movements of modernism. Their philosophy was based upon the philosophy of positivism, and the writings of auguste comte and hippolyte taine.
vuillard's later work and legacy
After 1900, when les nabis disbanded, Vuillard adopted a more realistic style, approaching landscapes and interiors with greater detail and vivid colors. He continued to produce paintings that explored domestic scenes and portraits of individuals from the intellectual and artistic circles of paris.
Vuillard’s distinctive style—characterized by muted palettes, flattened perspectives, and meticulous attention to texture—established him as one of the most important figures in french art at the turn of the century. His work anticipates many developments in cubism and fauvism, demonstrating a profound understanding of visual perception.
key works and exhibitions
Vuillard’s paintings can be found in various museums, including the musée de la révolution française (france), which boasts a rich collection of artworks, documents, and objects related to the revolutionary period. Some of his notable works include “Woman Sweeping” by Maurice Denis and “Jean de la Barre” by Jean Clouet, which depict a young man condemned to death for blasphemy during the ancien régime.
Vuillard’s later work, such as his portraits of french industry and arts figures, can be seen in various galleries, including those at intimism art movement and jean-édouard vuillard's page on ArtsDot.
