Vrouw en spelend kind in park met wandelaars - Édouard Vuillard
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Description
A park scene by Édouard Vuillard shows a woman and child playing in the foreground, with a crowd of people strolling in the background. The work is characterised by soft colours and loose brushstrokes, capturing a moment of everyday life.
This work by Édouard Vuillard (1868-1940), a French Post-Impressionist painter, depicts a scene of leisure and everyday life. Vuillard, associated with the Nabis group, often portrayed domestic interiors and intimate settings, but this image presents a public park filled with figures. The composition is divided into two distinct groups: in the foreground, a woman and child are engaged in play, while in the background, a crowd of people stroll through the park. The artist's characteristic style is evident in the use of soft, muted colours and a slightly flattened perspective. The figures are rendered with loose, sketch-like brushstrokes, giving the scene an informal, almost snapshot-like quality. The overall effect is one of quiet observation, capturing a fleeting moment of modern life. The colour palette is restrained, dominated by yellows and blues, which creates a harmonious and unified image. The work captures the essence of Parisian life during the late 19th or early 20th century, reflecting the artist's interest in portraying the world around him.
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Vrouw en spelend kind in park met wandelaars - Édouard Vuillard
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Museum-grade giclée on FSC-certified archival matte paper, with framed and canvas options.
- Paper sizes: A4, A3, A2, A1, A0 and B2 (50×70 cm)
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- Frames: black, natural wood, dark wood or white
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Artist Biography
Édouard Vuillard
He joined the Nabis in the early 1890s, a group of young painters who took their name from the Hebrew word for prophets. The others (Bonnard, Denis, Serusier) were drawn to mysticism and esoteric philosophy. Vuillard was drawn to the interior. His mother's workroom, with its bolts of fabric, wallpaper patterns, and women in patterned dresses, became his subject. The paintings flatten space: the figure merges with the wallpaper, the dress dissolves into the upholstery, the room becomes a single surface of competing patterns. Critics called the approach Intimism.
He painted almost exclusively domestic scenes: rooms, tables, women sewing, women reading. The scale is modest. The colours are muted. There is no drama, no allegory, no mythology. The work assumes that a woman sitting in a chair in a room with good light is enough to make a painting, which it is.
He never married. He lived with his mother until she died and then lived alone. In the late twentieth century, historians began to reassess his decorative work (screens, murals, theatre sets for Lugne-Poe's Theatre de l'Oeuvre) and recognised that the small domestic paintings were not minor work but a deliberate programme: the interior as a subject equal to landscape or history.
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