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Farmhouse at Le Pouldu

Paul Sérusier1890

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Washington, DC, United States

Paul Sérusier was born in Paris, and signed on as a student at the Académie Julian—the largest private art academy in Paris—in 1884. In the summer and autumn of 1888 he traveled in Britanny, where he visited for several weeks the village of Pont-Aven. At the Pension Gloanec, a gathering place of artists, he came into contact with Paul Gauguin. Gauguin and other painters were attracted by the remoteness of Brittany from the sophisticated art world of Paris, and they admired the relative simplicity of the Breton peasants' rural life, their picturesque regional costumes, and a traditional religious faith seemingly unchanged since medieval times. Sérusier soon became an intimate of the artistic circle around Gauguin, including Emile Bernard and Maurice Denis, who called themselves the Nabis (derived from a Hebrew word for prophet). They did not wish to capture the appearances of nature in a realistic manner, but rather to simplify form and color, and to arrange their sense perceptions into works of art that were decorative objects with a certain autonomy or independent artistic identity. Denis expressed these ideas most radically in his famous statement: "Remember that a painting—before being a war horse, a nude woman, or some anecdote—is essentially a flat surface covered with colors arranged in a certain order." [1]


Sérusier's _Farmhouse at Le Pouldu_ is based on his observation of a typical Breton farmhouse, with a woman in local costume crossing the yard. But he has simplified shapes, flattened forms, and reduced the complexities of sunlight and dappled shade to broad areas of color, bounded by clear outlines. This flattening out of forms and the employment of sinuous linear patterns to unify the picture surface was sometimes referred to by the Nabis as "synthetism," denoting the idea of an artificial pictorial unity that sets the work of art apart from mere natural appearances. Sérusier's manner of painting is strongly influenced by Gauguin and Paul Cézanne, notably in the deliberately applied rows of short, finely hatched brushmarks, quite visible in the sky, trees, thatch of the cottage, and the pile of hay. Rather than the conventional pictorial subjects of farmhouse, peasant woman, farmyard, gate, trees, and the fields beyond, it is their decorative organization that forms the true subject of Sérusier's picture.


(Text by Philip Conisbee, published in the National Gallery of Art exhibition catalogue, _Art for the Nation_, 2000)


<strong>Notes</strong>


1. Maurice Denis, _Définition du néo-traditionnisme_, 1890.

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  • Title: Farmhouse at Le Pouldu
  • Creator: Paul Sérusier
  • Date Created: 1890
  • Physical Dimensions: overall: 72 x 60 cm (28 3/8 x 23 5/8 in.) framed: 101.6 x 88.9 x 7.6 cm (40 x 35 x 3 in.)
  • Provenance: (Druet, Paris).[1] Hugo Troendle [1882-1955], Munich;[2] purchased 1925 by the Ulm Museum, Germany; (sale, Stuttgarter Kunstkabinett Roman Norbert Ketterer, Stuttgart, 29 November – 1 December 1955).[3] (Galerie H. & G. Abels, Cologne), in 1956.[4] Rosensaft collection, New York, in 1976.[5] Frank Lloyd, New York. (Marlborough-Gerson Gallery Inc., New York);[6] Mr. and Mrs. [1927-2020] Alexander M. Laughlin, New York; gift (partial and promised) 2000 to NGA. [1] This name and that of “Professor Baum” are on a label on the back of the painting. However, Alexandra Chava Seymann, provenance researcher at the Ulm Museum, has kindly explained to the Gallery that Baum was never an owner of the painting; he was Prof. Dr. Julius Baum (1882-1959), director of the Ulm Museum from 1924 to 1933. She also suggested that "Druet, Paris" is likely the gallery owned by Eugène Druet (1867-1916); his name does not appear in the Ulm Museum's file on the painting. See her e-mails of 11 and 18 December 2017, in NGA curatorial files. [2] This information, the additional details in note 3 about the painting’s ownership by the Ulm Museum, and copies that are now in NGA curatorial files of many relevant documents were kindly provided by Alexandra Chava Seymann (see note 1). Troendle was a German painter and writer about art, and it is possible he bought the painting from the Thannhauser Gallery in Munich. It was originally a loan to the Ulm Museum in 1925, as number L117, with the title _Bretonisches Bauernhaus_. Further research in the Thannhauser Gallery archive will be required to determine the details (the Thannhauser records are number A077 in ZADIK-Zentralarchiv für deutsche und internationale Kunstmarktforschung e. V. [Central Archive for German and International Art Market Research], Cologne). [3] With the rise of the National Socialist party in Germany in the 1930s, the painting was considered “Degenerate Art,” and, because he was Jewish, the Ulm Museum’s director, Julius Baum (see note 1) was forced out of his position. The painting was included in a 1933 list of works to be deaccessioned from the museum, and in the same year it was part of an exhibition at the museum, _10 Jahre Ulmer Kunstpolitik_, meant to mock and defame Baum and his support of modern art and artists. The museum’s new acting manager made unsuccessful attempts to exchange the painting or sell it abroad, and in 1937 the painting somehow escaped the fate of over 200 works of art that were seized from the Ulm Museum and either auctioned off or destroyed. It remained in storage at the museum, and by 1950 the painting was again on display; a local newspaper article featured it: “Artwork of the Month,” _Schwäbische Donauzeitung_ (15 June 1950). However, in the early 1950s, with much of the museum’s modern art gone, the decision was made to focus on regional art, and to deaccession and sell works to raise funds for new acquisitions. A group of works from the Ulm Museum, including this painting, were sent to auction in late 1955; there is no record of the purchaser. See also: Brigitte Reinhardt, ed., _Kunst und Kultur in Ulm 1933-1945_, exh. cat., Ulmer Museum, Ulm, 1993: 60, no. 50. [4] Cited as the owner in John Rewald, _Post-Impressionism from Van Gogh to Gauguin_, New York, 1956: 293. The 1978 edition of the same book lists the painting as "present whereabouts unknown" (p. 269). [5] Cited as the owner in Marcel Guicheteau, _Paul Sérusier_, Paris, 1976: no. 23. [6] Documents from the donors to the Gallery, in NGA curatorial files, appear to indicate the painting was purchased from this New York gallery, but they do not include a date.
  • Rights: CC0
  • Medium: oil on canvas
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

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