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Bernard invented cloisonnism at twenty and spent the rest of his life arguing about it. The technique, which uses bold flat colours separated by dark outlines (like cloisonne enamel), was developed in 1887 during conversations with Louis Anquetin. When Paul Gauguin arrived at Pont-Aven in Brittany the following year, Bernard shared the method with him. Gauguin adopted it, made it famous, and failed to credit Bernard. The quarrel lasted for decades.

Biography
He was raised by his grandmother, who owned a laundry in Lille, because his younger sister was ill and required his parents' full attention. He entered the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris but was expelled for insubordination. At the Academie Cormon he met Toulouse-Lautrec and Van Gogh; his friendship with Van Gogh produced some of the most important letters in art history.
Bernard and Gauguin fell out definitively in 1891 over the paternity of Symbolism and cloisonnism. Bernard believed he had been written out of the story, which he had. He spent years writing criticism and art history to set the record straight, producing first-hand accounts of the period that remain primary sources.
His later work turned conservative. He travelled to Egypt, studied the Old Masters, and repudiated the avant-garde experiments of his youth. The early paintings, made between 1886 and 1897 when he was barely out of his teens, are the ones that matter. He was brilliant too young and spent the rest of his career looking backwards. His correspondence with Van Gogh, preserved and published, is one of the most direct records of how two young painters in the 1880s thought about colour, composition and what painting was for.
Timeline
- 1888Painted "Self-Portrait with Portrait of Gauguin" aged 20.
- 1888Painted "Buckwheat Harvesters at Pont Aven" aged 20.
- 1900Painted "The smoking Hashish" aged 32.
- 1908Painted "After the Bath (The Nymphs)" aged 40.
- 1919Painted "Portrait of a Woman" aged 51.
Notable Works
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Where to See Emile Bernard
4 museums worldwide.
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2 worksMusée départemental de l'Oise
Beauvais, France
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2 worksKunsthalle Bremen
Mitte, Germany
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1 works
Library-museum of the Comédie-Française
Paris, France
Emile Bernard prints
Hand-finished archival prints from Emile Bernard's body of work.
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See all Emile Bernard prints →Frequently Asked Questions
When was Emile Bernard born?
Emile Bernard was born in 1868 and died in 1941.What art movement was Emile Bernard part of?
Emile Bernard was associated with Post-Impressionism and Symbolism.Where can I see Emile Bernard's paintings?
Emile Bernard's works can be seen in 54 museums worldwide, including Van Gogh Museum, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Quimper, Musée d'Orsay.What is Emile Bernard known for?
Emile Bernard is known for inventing cloisonnism at twenty, sharing it with Gauguin, watching Gauguin take the credit, and spending decades arguing about who invented Symbolism.
Sources
Editorial draws on the following primary and tertiary references for Emile Bernard.
- [1] academic The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica, Émile Bernard | Post-Impressionist, Symbolist, Synthetist Used for: biography.
- [2] book guggenheim-gauguindecorativ00gaug Used for: biography.
- [3] book Post-impressionism : cross-currents in European painting Used for: biography.
- [4] book Post-impressionism : cross-currents in European painting Used for: biography.
- [5] museum Emile Bernard - Crucifixion, also called Christ, from "L'Estampe Originale" Used for: museum holdings.
- [6] museum Émile Bernard | MoMA Used for: biography.
Editorial overseen by Solis Prints. Sources verified 2026-06-28. Click a source for details, or hover over [N] in the page above to preview.
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