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The Vuillard Family
The Vuillard Family

The Vuillard Family

Artist (1868 - 1940)
Datec. 1902-04 or 1910-12
MediumOil on card
Dimensions25.7 x 32.2 cm
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineCollection & image © Hugh Lane Gallery. Purchased, 2024.
Object number2209
DescriptionBorn in 1868 in Cuiseaux, France, Édouard Vuillard is regarded as one of the most innovative painters and printmakers of the modern period. Vuillard formed part of Les Nabis (from the Hebrew and Arabic words for "prophets"), a Symbolist group of painters which also included French artists Maurice Denis and Pierre Bonnard. Along with his fellow ‘Intimist’ Pierre Bonnard, he is renowned for his depictions of intimate interior scenes in domestic settings, frequently of his own family, as in his work.
The Vuillard family group portrait was not exhibited during the artist's lifetime, and given the subject matter was probably intended as a private work. Vuillard Family is one of a small number of self-portraits by Vuillard, which also, uniquely, depicts the artist with his mother and sister. The complex relationship between Vuillard and his mother is documented in many paintings by the artist. For many years, Vuillard and his mother shared modest rented apartments, from which his mother ran a sewing business, where she employed his sister. The artist’s bedroom doubled as a studio. Madame Vuillard is usually a dominant presence in the paintings in which she appears. For example, in Interior - Mother and Sister of the Artist (1893, MoMA) the dark silhouette of Madame Vuillard dominates the image, while Marie presses against the wall, fading into the patterned wallpaper.
In The Vuillard Family, the three figures occupy most of the painting, creating a claustrophobic effect. The artist himself is on the left. The figures and the space they occupy are loosely sketched in paint. Despite its small scale, it is a work of psychological power.
Vuillard is also represented in the collection by La Cheminée (The Mantlepiece), which was purchased by Hugh Lane from the Bernheim-Jeune gallery in Paris. La Cheminée is a combination of an interior scene and a still-life, showing Vuillard’s emphasis on pattern and decoration, which are also distinctive features in The Vuillard Family.

On View
On view
La Cheminée
Édouard Vuillard
1905
Boulevard de Clichy
Pierre Bonnard
c. 1911
Mrs Lucy de Laszlo
Philip Alexius de László de Lombos
1902
La Dame aux Perles
Sir John Lavery
1901
The Artist's Studio
James Abbott McNeill Whistler
1865
Loading a Ship
Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson
1917
Dawn at Southwark
Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson
1919
The Marquis del Grillo
Antonio Mancini
1889
Reclining Figure No. 2
Henry Moore
1953
Decorative Group
Augustus Edwin John
1908
The Ninth Hour
Mainie Jellett
1941