Garden Side. From Monet to Bonnard: Édouard Vuillard and the Gardens

Édouard Vuillard's gardens have urban roots. He often visited the Square des Batignolles, the Jardin des Tuileries and the Bois de Boulogne. He recreated their pathways and rows of trees, under which simplified female and child figures can be seen, in the work produced during his Nabis years. From 1896, he began to immerse himself in more countrified gardens, paying more frequent visits to Bourgogne, to the home of his friends Thadée and Misia Natanson, and after 1899, to L’Étang-la-Ville, to visit Ker-Xavier Roussel. The 20th century saw him frequently visiting a series of gardens in seaside villas leased by Jos and Lucie Hessel, then the pathways of grounds of the Château des Clayes, which the Hessel family acquired in 1925.

A stone's throw from his home on Rue Saint-Honoré, the Jardin des Tuileries was a source of inspiration for Vuillard, regardless of the season. This inspiration was expressed in his decorative work, his smaller painted panels and his lithographs.

Young Girl with a hoop (1891) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

This little Nabis icon, who remained unknown to the public for a long time, transformed the
alignments of the trees in the Jardin des Tuileries into a surreal garden. It perfectly sums up all Vuillard's boldness: the collage of layers, without depth of field; the synthesized volumes, where modeling and shadows have been willingly abandoned in favor of unified surfaces; the blend of colors.

The foliage receives a shower of pink and vermilion tones.

The ground is a gentle yet bold pink, marked by movements of ocher yellow.

The rhythm of the vertical tree trunks and horizontal bands formed by the yellow path and the two levels of leafy greenery create an orthonormal weave around the little girl, whose deep blue dress further accentuates the arching shape of the circle.

Tuileries Garden (1896) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

The four-color lithography “Jardin des Tuileries” was commissioned by the merchant Ambroise Vollard for his “Album des Peintre-graveurs”, which was published in 1896. With his colorist skills, Vuillard played with juxtapositioning or superposing colors: the lawn was created by combining yellow and blue stone. Following the example of the Japanese printing masters, which he used as a reference, Vuillard uses the white of the paper, whose flat widths structure the composition.

The alternating immaculate pathways and lawns create geometric forms that are enlivened by a group of pigeons in the foreground.

This print has bright highlights of yellow and blue pastel, demonstrating Vuillard's color studies. These highlights are particularly noticeable on the generously-sized checked coat of the central figure, as well as in the clothing of the group of women and little girls seen on the composition's right-hand side.

Ker-Xavier Roussel, his son Jacques and his mother (1901) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

Ker-Xavier Roussel, Vuillard's brother-in-law and fellow Nabi, left Paris in 1899 to settle in the countryside to the west of Paris, in L’Étang-la-Ville. Vuillard, who was an avid photographer, captured the happy moments of this family life.

Madame Vuillard at Roussel's garden ("La Jacannette") at L'Etang-la-Ville (1920) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

In 1907, Roussel had a house built in L’Étang-la-Ville: “La Jacannette”, named after his two children, Jacques and Annette. He carefully curated his garden, which boasted truly theatrical decor, designed to be painted and endlessly remodeled. Each of its features was carefully selected for its artistic and luminous qualities. Here, Vuillard photographed the large trees and the surrounding wooded hillsides.

The Chestnut Trees (1932/1935) by Ker-Xavier RousselMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

The very same hillsides as those which can also be found in Roussel's work, as demonstrated in this large pastel piece, which effuses classic serenity, and in which the blooming garden becomes an ode to the eternal regeneration of life.

Some nymph and faun figures, roughly sketched, unite the contemporary Seine Valley and the garden in L’Étang-la-Ville with the artist's mythological dreams.

The Garden of "Château Rouge", at Amfreville (1905) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

From 1901, Vuillard spent summers with Jos and Lucie Hessel, who rented out beautiful villas on the Normandy and Brittany coasts for months at a time. There, their Parisian lifestyle transformed into long lunches in the shade of the trees, trips to the beach and strolls through the fields. In 1905 and 1906, they occupied “Château Rouge”, in Amfreville.

The Garden of "Château Rouge", at Amfreville (1905) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

The well-maintained flowerbeds in the garden …

The Flowerbed (1907) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

… show off their incandescent hues in this pastel work by Vuillard.

Garden of "Les Pavillons" at Cricqueboeuf (1910) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

In 1910 and 1911, Cricqueboeuf and the “Les Pavillons” villa provided the setting for the Hessel family and Vuillard's summer vacation. The painter used photography to embed the garden's decor into the seaside, boldly outlining the birds' eye view from one of the upper floors. This snapshot paved the way for a decorative project that is presented in the Giverny exhibition.

At "La Divette", Cabourg (1913) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

In the same way, Vuillard photographed the garden of “La Divette”, a villa located close to Cabourg that was rented by the Hessel family for the summer of 1913. Several drawings, as well as some snapshots, preserve the memory of this place, and were selected by the artist for a decorative piece commissioned by brothers Josse and Gaston Bernheim.

La Divette, Cabourg, by the river (1913) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

This large study is the sketch for one of the 13 panels created by Vuillard on this occasion. Here, the painter glosses over details.

Vuillard particularly wanted to ensure that his composition retained the frame formed by the foliage of the trees …

… as well as the panoramic view of the meadow in the background.

The bird's eye view gives free reign to the clusters of green and the patches of yellow sun on the ground. The result creates the impression of total immersion in nature.

The Park and the Pond at the château des Clayes (1929) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

In 1925, the Hessel family purchased the Château des Clayes, not far from Versailles. Vuillard then went on to spend most of his time in the countryside, and was won over by the luxuriant greenery of the grounds that Lucie Hessel skillfully maintained.

Vuillard's Mother in the path of the château des Clayes (1927) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

In 1927, he captured his mother's gentle expression under the leafy greenery of the Clayes property.

The Comedy, sketch for a decoration for the Palais de Chaillot (1936/1937) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

Vuillard chose Clayes' grounds as the setting for the decorated lintel that the French state commissioned from him in 1936, for the Théâtre de Chaillot's foyer, on the theme of Comedy.

In this version, which is a first sketch, the painter created a deep space, outlined by a border of sketched vegetation and farmyard animals. This garland, where we can see a donkey, demonstrates the scene's allegorical character, in the same way as tapestries.

Equally as important as the decoration, the figures in this little scene can be identified: Lucie Hessel takes the central position (white hair and cream skirt); her niece, Berthe Keller, can be seen in the red skirt; and her adopted daughter, Lulu (striped dress) also joins the group.

The Outbuildings at the château des Clayes (1932/1938) by Édouard VuillardMusée des impressionnismes Giverny

The Château des Clayes gave Vuillard infinite landscape possibilities, where vegetation became the key subject. The delicate, immediate perception emerging from his pastels at this time bears an obvious resemblance to the work of Monet and allows us reevaluate the work from the last 20 years of Vuillard's life in Impressionist terms.

Credits: Story

The exhibition "Côté jardin. De Monet à Bonnard", curated by Cyrille Sciama and Mathias Chivot, is presented at the musée des impressionnismes Giverny from May 19 to November 1, 2021.

The musée des impressionnismes Giverny warmly thanks :
Anisabelle Berès Montanari, Marie Christine Bonola, Patrick Dewez, Nicolas Langlois.

Discover the exhibition catalogue, published by the musée des impressionnismes Giverny and the RMN : https://www.mdig.fr/boutique/catalogue-d-exposition-cote-jardin-de-monet-a-bonnard/

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