Pierre Bonnard (; 3 October 186723 January 1947) was a French
painter
Painting is a Visual arts, visual art, which is characterized by the practice of applying paint, pigment, color or other medium to a solid surface (called "matrix" or "Support (art), support"). The medium is commonly applied to the base with ...
,
illustrator
An illustrator is an artist who specializes in enhancing writing or elucidating concepts by providing a visual representation that corresponds to the content of the associated text or idea. The illustration may be intended to clarify complicate ...
and
printmaker
Printmaking is the process of creating artworks by printing, normally on paper, but also on fabric, wood, metal, and other surfaces. "Traditional printmaking" normally covers only the process of creating prints using a hand processed technique ...
, known especially for the stylized decorative qualities of his paintings and his bold use of color. A founding member of the
Post-Impressionist group of
avant-garde
In the arts and literature, the term ''avant-garde'' ( meaning or ) identifies an experimental genre or work of art, and the artist who created it, which usually is aesthetically innovative, whilst initially being ideologically unacceptable ...
painters
Les Nabis, his early work was strongly influenced by the work of
Paul Gauguin
Eugène Henri Paul Gauguin (; ; 7 June 1848 – 8 May 1903) was a French painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramist, and writer, whose work has been primarily associated with the Post-Impressionist and Symbolist movements. He was also an influ ...
, as well as the prints of
Hokusai
, known mononymously as Hokusai, was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist of the Edo period, active as a painter and printmaker. His woodblock printing in Japan, woodblock print series ''Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji'' includes the iconic print ''The Gr ...
and other Japanese artists. Bonnard was a leading figure in the transition from
Impressionism
Impressionism was a 19th-century art movement characterized by visible brush strokes, open Composition (visual arts), composition, emphasis on accurate depiction of light in its changing qualities (often accentuating the effects of the passage ...
to
Modernism
Modernism was an early 20th-century movement in literature, visual arts, and music that emphasized experimentation, abstraction, and Subjectivity and objectivity (philosophy), subjective experience. Philosophy, politics, architecture, and soc ...
. He painted landscapes, urban scenes, portraits and intimate domestic scenes, where the backgrounds, colors and painting style usually took precedence over the subject.
Early life and education

Pierre Bonnard was born in
Fontenay-aux-Roses,
Hauts-de-Seine
Hauts-de-Seine (; ) is a department in the Île-de-France region of France. It covers Paris's western inner suburbs. It is bordered by Paris, Seine-Saint-Denis and Val-de-Marne to the east, Val-d'Oise to the north, Yvelines to the west and ...
on 3 October 1867. His mother, Élisabeth Mertzdorff, was from
Alsace
Alsace (, ; ) is a cultural region and a territorial collectivity in the Grand Est administrative region of northeastern France, on the west bank of the upper Rhine, next to Germany and Switzerland. In January 2021, it had a population of 1,9 ...
. His father, Eugène Bonnard, was from the
Dauphiné
The Dauphiné ( , , ; or ; or ), formerly known in English as Dauphiny, is a former province in southeastern France, whose area roughly corresponded to that of the present departments of Isère, Drôme and Hautes-Alpes. The Dauphiné was ...
, and was a senior official in the French Ministry of War. He had a brother, Charles, and a sister, Andrée, who in 1890 married the composer
Claude Terrasse.
He received his education in the Lycée Louis-le-Grand and Lycée Charlemagne in Vanves. He showed a talent for drawing and water colors, as well as caricatures. He painted frequently in the gardens of his parents' country home at
Le Grand-Lemps near
La Côte-Saint-André in the
Dauphiné
The Dauphiné ( , , ; or ; or ), formerly known in English as Dauphiny, is a former province in southeastern France, whose area roughly corresponded to that of the present departments of Isère, Drôme and Hautes-Alpes. The Dauphiné was ...
. He also showed a strong interest in literature. He received his baccalaureate in the classics, and, to satisfy his father, between 1886 and 1887 earned his license in law, and began practicing as a lawyer in 1888.
While he was studying law, he attended art classes at the
Académie Julian
The () was a private art school for painting and sculpture founded in Paris, France, in 1867 by French painter and teacher Rodolphe Julian (1839–1907). The school was active from 1868 through 1968. It remained famous for the number and qual ...
in Paris. At the Académie Julian he met his future friends and fellow artists,
Paul Sérusier,
Maurice Denis
Maurice Denis (; 25 November 1870 – 13 November 1943) was a French painter, decorative artist, and writer. An important figure in the transitional period between impressionism and modern art, he is associated with '' Les Nabis'', symbolism, ...
, Gabriel Ibels and
Paul Ranson.
[Cogeval, Guy, ''Bonnard'' (2015) p. 148]
In 1888, Bonnard was accepted by the
École des Beaux-Arts
; ) refers to a number of influential art schools in France. The term is associated with the Beaux-Arts architecture, Beaux-Arts style in architecture and city planning that thrived in France and other countries during the late nineteenth centu ...
, where he met
Édouard Vuillard
Jean-Édouard Vuillard (; 11 November 186821 June 1940) was a French painter, decorative artist, and printmaker. From 1891 through 1900, Vuillard was a member of the avant garde artistic group Les Nabis, creating paintings that assembled areas ...
and
Ker Xavier Roussel. He also sold his first commercial work of art, a design for a poster for France-Champagne, which helped him convince his family that he could make a living as an artist. His first studio was on the rue Lechapelais.
In 1889–1890, Bonnard performed military service as a ''soldat de deuxième classe'' in the 52nd Infantry Regiment. After leaving the Army, Bonnard did not return to the Law, but rather to art, becoming an artist.
Personal life

From 1893 until her death, Bonnard lived with
Marthe de Méligny (1869–1942), and she was the model for many of his paintings, including many nudes. Her birth name was Maria Boursin, but she had changed it before she met Bonnard. They married in 1925. In the years before their marriage, Bonnard had love affairs with two other women, who also served as models for some of his paintings: Renée Monchaty (the partner of the American painter
Harry Lachmann) and Lucienne Dupuy de Frenelle, the wife of a doctor. It has been suggested that Bonnard may have been the father of Lucienne's second son. Renée Monchaty committed suicide shortly after Bonnard and de Méligny married.
Early career – the Nabis
Bonnard received pressure from a different direction to continue painting. While he had received his license to practice law in 1888, he failed in the examination for entering the official registry of lawyers.
[Cogeval (2015), p. 9] Art was his only option. After the summer holidays, he joined with his friends from the Academy Julian to form
Les Nabis, an informal group of artists with different styles and philosophies but common artistic ambitions. As he later wrote, Bonnard was entirely unaware of the Impressionist painters, or of Gauguin and other new painters.
His friend
Paul Sérusier showed him a painting on a wooden cigar box he made after visiting
Paul Gauguin
Eugène Henri Paul Gauguin (; ; 7 June 1848 – 8 May 1903) was a French painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramist, and writer, whose work has been primarily associated with the Post-Impressionist and Symbolist movements. He was also an influ ...
at Pont-Aven, using patches of pure color in the style of Gauguin. In 1890, Maurice Denis, at age twenty, formalized the doctrine in which a painting was considered "a surface plane covered with colors assembled in a certain order."
Some of the Nabis had highly religious, philosophical or mystical approaches to their paintings, but Bonnard remained more cheerful and unaffiliated. The painter-writer Aurelien Lugné-Poe, who shared a studio at 28 rue Pigalle with Bonnard and Vuillard, wrote later, "Pierre Bonnard was the humorist among us; his nonchalant gaiety, and humor expressed in his productions, of which the decorative spirit always preserved a sort of satire, from which he later departed."
In 1891, he met
Toulouse-Lautrec and, in December 1891, showed his work at the annual exhibition of the
Société des Artistes Indépendants. In the same year, Bonnard also began an association with ''
La Revue Blanche'', for which he and
Édouard Vuillard
Jean-Édouard Vuillard (; 11 November 186821 June 1940) was a French painter, decorative artist, and printmaker. From 1891 through 1900, Vuillard was a member of the avant garde artistic group Les Nabis, creating paintings that assembled areas ...
designed a
frontispiece. In March 1891, his work was displayed with the work of the other Nabis at the Le Barc de Boutteville.
The style of Japanese graphic arts became an important influence on Bonnard. In 1893, a major exposition of works of
Utamaro
was a Japanese artist. He is one of the most highly regarded designers of ukiyo-e woodblock prints and paintings, and is best known for his ''Bijin-ga, bijin ōkubi-e'' "large-headed pictures of beautiful women" of the 1790s. He also produ ...
and
Hiroshige was held at the Durand-Ruel Gallery, and the Japanese influence, particularly the use of multiple points of view, and the use of bold geometric patterns in clothing, such as checkered blouses, began to appear in his work. Because of his passion for Japanese art, his nickname among the Nabis became ''Le Nabi le trés japonard.''
He devoted an increasing amount of attention to decorative art, designing furniture, fabrics, fans and other objects. He continued to design posters for France-Champagne, which gained him an audience outside the art world. In 1892, he began creating lithographs, and painted ''Le Corsage a carreaux'' and ''La Partie de croquet''. He also made a series of illustrations for the music books of his brother-in-law,
Claude Terrasse.
In 1894, he turned in a new direction and made a series of paintings of scenes of the life of Paris. In his urban scenes, the buildings and even animals were the focus of attention; faces were rarely visible. He also made his first portrait of his future wife, Marthe, whom he married in 1925.
In 1895, he became an early participant of the movement of
Art Nouveau
Art Nouveau ( ; ; ), Jugendstil and Sezessionstil in German, is an international style of art, architecture, and applied art, especially the decorative arts. It was often inspired by natural forms such as the sinuous curves of plants and ...
, designing a stained glass window, called ''Maternity'', for
Tiffany.
In 1895, he had his first individual exposition of paintings, posters and lithographs at the Durand-Ruel Gallery. He also illustrated a novel, ''Marie'', by
Peter Nansen, published in series by in ''La Revue Blanche''. The following year he participated in a group exposition of Nabis at the Amboise Vollard Gallery. In 1899, he took part in another major exposition of works of the Nabis.
File:Pierre Bonnard - Women with Dog, 1891.jpg, ''Women with a Dog'' (1891), Clark Art Institute
The Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, commonly referred to as the Clark, is an art museum and research institution located in Williamstown, Massachusetts, Williamstown, Massachusetts, United States. Its collection consists of European ...
. The checked blouse was inspired by Japanese prints.
File:LE CORSAGE À CARREAUX.JPG, ''Checkered Blouse'' (1892), a portrait of his sister Andrée Terrasse, with her cat
File:Fairground Sideshow (Parade) by Pierre Bonnard.JPG, ''The Parade'' (1892), one of several colorful paintings of Paris street performers
File:Two Dogs in a Deserted Street, Pierre Bonnard, c1894.jpg, ''Two Dogs in a Deserted Street'' (1894), oil on canvas, National Gallery of Art
File:Pierre Bonnard, 1895 - L'Omnibus.jpg, ''The Omnibus'' (1895)
File:'Dancers' by Pierre Bonnard.jpg, ''Dancers'' (1896)
Later years (1900–1938)
Throughout the early 20th century, as new artistic movements emerged, Bonnard kept refining and revising his personal style, and exploring new subjects and media, but keeping constant the characteristics of his work. Working in his studio at 65 rue de Douai in Paris, he presented paintings at the Salon des Independents in 1900, and also produced 109 lithographs for ''Parallèment'', a book of poems by
Paul Verlaine. He also took part in an exhibition with the other Nabis at the Bernheim Jeaune gallery. He presented nine paintings at the Salon des Independents in 1901. In 1905, he produced a series of nudes and of portraits, and in 1906 had a personal exposition at the Bernheim-Jeune Gallery. In 1908, he illustrated a book of poetry by
Octave Mirbeau, and made his first long stay in the South of France, at the home of the painter
Manguin in
Saint-Tropez
Saint-Tropez ( , ; ) is a Communes of France, commune in the Var (department), Var departments of France, department and the regions of France, region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, Southern France. It is west of Nice and east of Marseille, o ...
. in 1909 and, in 1911, began a series of decorative panels, called ''Méditerranée'', for the Russian art patron
Ivan Morozov.
[Cogeval (2015), p. 149]
During the years of the First World War, Bonnard concentrated on nudes and portraits, and in 1916 completed a series of large compositions, including ''La Pastorale'', ''Méditterranée'', ''La Paradis Terreste'' and ''Paysage de Ville''. His reputation in the French art establishment was secure; in 1918 he was selected, along with
Renoir, as an honorary President of the Association of Young French Artists.
In the 1920s, he produced illustrations for a book by
Andre Gide (1924) and another by
Claude Anet (1923). He showed works at the Autumn Salon in 1923, and in 1924 was honored with a retrospective of sixty-eight of his works at the Galerie Druet. In 1925, he purchased a villa in
Cannes
Cannes (, ; , ; ) is a city located on the French Riviera. It is a communes of France, commune located in the Alpes-Maritimes departments of France, department, and host city of the annual Cannes Film Festival, Midem, and Cannes Lions Internatio ...
.
File:Siesta 1900.jpg, ''Siesta'' (1900), National Gallery of Victoria
The National Gallery of Victoria, popularly known as the NGV, is an art museum in Melbourne, Victoria (state), Victoria, Australia. Founded in 1861, it is Australia's oldest and list of most visited art museums in the world, most visited art mu ...
, Melbourne
File:Pierre Bonnard, 1908 - Nu à contre-jour.jpg, '' Nude Against the Light'' (1908), Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, Brussels
File:Pierre Bonnard, 1908 - Misia.jpg, ''Portrait of Misia Godebska'' (1908), Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, Madrid
File:'Morning in Paris' by Pierre Bonnard, 1911.JPG, ''Morning in Paris'' (1912), Hermitage Museum
The State Hermitage Museum ( rus, Государственный Эрмитаж, r=Gosudarstvennyj Ermitaž, p=ɡəsʊˈdarstvʲɪn(ː)ɨj ɪrmʲɪˈtaʂ, links=no) is a museum of art and culture in Saint Petersburg, Russia, and holds the large ...
, Saint Petersburg
File:Vernonnet - Paysage près de Giverny - Pierre Bonnard - ABDAG002365.jpg, ''Vernonnet - Paysage près de Giverny'' (1922), Aberdeen Art Gallery
Aberdeen Art Gallery is the main visual arts exhibition space in the city of Aberdeen, Scotland. It was founded in 1884 in a building designed by Alexander Marshall Mackenzie, with a sculpture court added in 1905. In 1900, it received the art ...
File:BonnardJeunesfemmes.jpg, ''Jeunes femmes dans la rue'' (1922), private collection
Bonnard, Coupe de fruits sur une table.jpg, '' Fruit Bowl on a Table'' (1934), Strasbourg Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art
File:Desnudo con silla (1935 - 1938) - Pierre Bonnard.png, '' Nu ë la chaise'' (1935-1938), Museo Botero, Bogotá
Final years and death (1939–1947)
In 1938, Bonnard and Vuillard's works were featured at an exposition at the
Art Institute of Chicago
The Art Institute of Chicago, founded in 1879, is one of the oldest and largest art museums in the United States. The museum is based in the Art Institute of Chicago Building in Chicago's Grant Park (Chicago), Grant Park. Its collection, stewa ...
. The outbreak of
World War II
World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
in September 1939 forced Bonnard to depart Paris for the south of France, where he remained until the end of the war. Under the German occupation, he refused to paint an official portrait of French collaborationist leader
Marechal Petain, but accepted a commission to paint a religious painting of
Saint Francis de Sales, with the face of his friend
Vuillard, who had died two years earlier.
In 1947 he finished his last painting, ''The Almond Tree in Blossom'', a week before his death in his cottage on La Route de Serra Capeou near
Le Cannet, on the
French Riviera. The
Museum of Modern Art
The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street (Manhattan), 53rd Street between Fifth Avenue, Fifth and Sixth Avenues. MoMA's collection spans the late 19th century to the present, a ...
in New York City organized a posthumous retrospective of Bonnard's work in 1948, although originally it was meant to be a celebration of the artist's 80th birthday.
File:Pierre Bonnard, c.1940-1946, Nude in Bathtub, oil on canvas, 122.56 × 150.50 cm, Carnegie Museum of Art.jpg, ''Nude in the Bath and Small Dog'', (c. 1941–1946) Carnegie Museum of Art
The Carnegie Museum of Art is an art museum in the Oakland (Pittsburgh), Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. The museum was originally known as the Department of Fine Arts, Carnegie Institute and was formerly located ...
Bemberg Fondation Toulouse - Dernier autoportrait de Pierre Bonnard de 1945 - 56x46.jpg, Last self-portrait (1945) Bemberg Fondation
File:PierreBonnard-1946-Stairs with Mimosa.png, Stairs with Mimosa (1946)
Japanism
Japanese art played an important part in Bonnard's work. He was first able to see the works of Japanese artists via the Paris gallery of
Siegfried Bing. Bing brought works by Hokusai and other Japanese print makers to France, and from May 1888 through April 1891 published a monthly art journal, ''Le Japon Artistique'', which included color illustrations in 1891. In 1890, Bing organized an important exhibition of seven hundred prints he had brought from Japan, and made a donation of Japanese art to the
Louvre
The Louvre ( ), or the Louvre Museum ( ), is a national art museum in Paris, France, and one of the most famous museums in the world. It is located on the Rive Droite, Right Bank of the Seine in the city's 1st arrondissement of Paris, 1st arron ...
.
[Lacambre, Geneviève, ''La déferlante japonaise'', published in ''Les Nabis et le décor'', Beaux Arts Editions (March 2019), pp. 38–40]
Bonnard used the model of Japanese ''kakemono'' scroll art—long, vertical panels—in his series of paintings ''Women in the garden'' (1890–91), now in the Museé d'Orsay. Originally designed to appear together as a single screen, Bonnard decided to display ''Women in the garden'' as four separate decorative panels. The female forms are reduced to flat silhouettes, and there is no rendering of depth in the picture. The faces are turned away from the viewer and the pictures are entirely dominated by the colors and bold patterns of the costumes and the backgrounds. The models are his sister Andreé and his cousin Berthe Schaedin. Bonnard often pictured women in checkered blouses, a design he said he had discovered in Japanese prints.
File:Pierre Bonnard, 1889 ca - détrempe.jpg, Painted screen (1889)
File:1896 Bonnard Familie des Komponisten Claude Terrasse anagoria.JPG, Painted screen; the Bonnard family in the garden (1896), Alte Nationalgalerie
Graphic arts
Bonnard wrote, "Notre génération a toujours cherché les rapports de l'art avec la vie" (Our generation always was searching for connections between art and life). Bonnard and the other Nabis were particularly interested in integrating their art into popular forms, such as posters, journal covers and illustrations, and engravings in books, as well as into ordinary household decoration, in the form of murals, painted screens, textiles, tapestries, furniture, glass and dishes.
At the beginning of his career, Bonnard designed posters for a French champagne firm, for which he gained public attention. He later produced many sets of engravings illustrating the works of the avant-garde authors of his time.
File:BonnardFranceChampagne.jpg, Poster for France-Champagne by Pierre Bonnard (1891), which made him known outside the art world
File:Bonnard - Met Collection - DT8576.jpg, Poster for the review ''Blanche'', Metropolitan Museum also published in Les Maîtres de l'Affiche
File:Les Parisiennes cph.3g10009.jpg, ''Les Parisiens'', lithograph (1893)
File:Bonnard - Met Collection - DP824352.jpg, Illustration for a music textbook written by his brother-in-law, composer Claude Terrasse (1893)
Method
Bonnard is known for his intense use of color, especially via areas built with small brush marks and close values. His often complex compositions—typically of sunlit interiors and gardens populated with friends and family members—are both narrative and autobiographical. Bonnard's fondness for depicting intimate scenes of everyday life, has led to him being called an "
Intimist"; his wife Marthe was an ever-present subject over the course of several decades.
[ She is seen seated at the kitchen table, with the remnants of a meal; or nude, as in a series of paintings where she reclines in the bathtub. He also painted several ]self-portrait
Self-portraits are Portrait painting, portraits artists make of themselves. Although self-portraits have been made since the earliest times, the practice of self-portraiture only gaining momentum in the Early Renaissance in the mid-15th century ...
s, landscapes, street scenes, and many still life
A still life (: still lifes) is a work of art depicting mostly wikt:inanimate, inanimate subject matter, typically commonplace objects which are either natural (food, flowers, dead animals, plants, rocks, shells, etc.) or artificiality, human-m ...
s, which usually depicted flowers and fruit.
Bonnard did not paint from life but rather drew his subject—sometimes photographing it as well—and made notes on the colors. He then painted the canvas in his studio from his notes. "I have all my subjects to hand," he said, "I go back and look at them. I take notes. Then I go home. And before I start painting I reflect, I dream."
He worked on numerous canvases simultaneously, which he tacked onto the walls of his small studio. In this way, he could more freely determine the shape of a painting; "It would bother me if my canvases were stretched onto a frame. I never know in advance what dimensions I am going to choose."
Critical reception and legacy
Claude Roger-Marx remarked that Bonnard "catches fleeting poses, steals unconscious gestures, crystallises the most transient expressions".
Although Bonnard avoided public attention, his work sold well during his life. At the time of his death, his reputation had been eclipsed by subsequent avant-garde
In the arts and literature, the term ''avant-garde'' ( meaning or ) identifies an experimental genre or work of art, and the artist who created it, which usually is aesthetically innovative, whilst initially being ideologically unacceptable ...
developments in the art world; reviewing a retrospective of Bonnard's work in Paris in 1947, Christian Zervos assessed the artist in terms of his relationship to Impressionism, and found him wanting. "In Bonnard's work," he wrote, "Impressionism becomes insipid and falls into decline." In response, Henri Matisse
Henri Émile Benoît Matisse (; 31 December 1869 – 3 November 1954) was a French visual arts, visual artist, known for both his use of colour and his fluid and original draughtsmanship. He was a drawing, draughtsman, printmaking, printmaker, ...
wrote: "I maintain that Bonnard is a great artist for our time and, naturally, for posterity."
Bonnard was described, by his own friend and historians, as a man of "quiet temperament" and one who was unobtrusively independent. His life was relatively free from "the tensions and reversals of untoward circumstance." It has been suggested that: "Like Daumier, whose life knew little serenity, Bonnard produced a work during his sixty years' activity that follows an even line of development."
Bonnard has been described as "the most thoroughly idiosyncratic of all the great twentieth-century painters", and the unusual vantage points of his compositions rely less on traditional modes of pictorial structure than voluptuous color, poetic allusions and visual wit. Identified as a late practitioner of Impressionism
Impressionism was a 19th-century art movement characterized by visible brush strokes, open Composition (visual arts), composition, emphasis on accurate depiction of light in its changing qualities (often accentuating the effects of the passage ...
in the early 20thcentury, he has since been recognized for his unique use of color and his complex imagery.[Amory, 4] "It's not just the colors that radiate in a Bonnard," writes Roberta Smith, "there's also the heat of mixed emotions, rubbed into smoothness, shrouded in chromatic veils and intensified by unexpected spatial conundrums and by elusive, uneasy figures."[Smith]
Two major exhibitions of Bonnard's work took place in 1998: February through May at the Tate Gallery in London, and from June through October at the Museum of Modern Art
The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street (Manhattan), 53rd Street between Fifth Avenue, Fifth and Sixth Avenues. MoMA's collection spans the late 19th century to the present, a ...
in New York City. In 2009, the exhibition "Pierre Bonnard: The Late Interiors" was shown at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, colloquially referred to as the Met, is an Encyclopedic museum, encyclopedic art museum in New York City. By floor area, it is the List of largest museums, third-largest museum in the world and the List of larg ...
.[ Reviewing the exhibition for the magazine '']The New Republic
''The New Republic'' (often abbreviated as ''TNR'') is an American magazine focused on domestic politics, news, culture, and the arts from a left-wing perspective. It publishes ten print magazines a year and a daily online platform. ''The New Y ...
'', Jed Perl wrote:
"Bonnard is the most thoroughly idiosyncratic of all the great twentieth-century painters. What sustains him is not traditional ideas of pictorial structure and order, but rather some unique combination of visual taste, psychological insight, and poetic feeling. He also has a quality that might be characterized as perceptual wit—an instinct for what will work in a painting. Almost invariably he recognizes the precise point where his voluptuousness may be getting out of hand, where he needs to introduce an ironic note. Bonnard's wit has everything to do with the eccentric nature of his compositions. He finds it funny to sneak a figure into a corner, or have a cat staring out at the viewer. His metaphoric caprices have a comic edge, as when he turns a figure into a pattern in the wallpaper. And when he imagines a basket of fruit as a heap of emeralds and rubies and diamonds, he does so with the panache of a magician pulling a rabbit out of a hat."[
]
In 2016, the Legion of Honor in San Francisco hosted an exhibit "Pierre Bonnard: Painting Arcadia", featuring more than 70 works spanning the artist's entire career.
Bonnard's record price in a public sale was for ''Terrasse à Vernon'', sold by Christie's
Christie's is a British auction house founded in 1766 by James Christie (auctioneer), James Christie. Its main premises are on King Street, St James's in London, and it has additional salerooms in New York, Paris, Hong Kong, Milan, Geneva, Shan ...
in 2011 for €8,485,287 (£7,014,200).
In 2014, the painting ''La femme aux Deux Fauteuils'' (''Woman with Two Armchairs''), with an estimated value of around €600,000 (£497,000), which had been stolen in London in 1970, was discovered in Italy. The painting, together with a work by Paul Gauguin
Eugène Henri Paul Gauguin (; ; 7 June 1848 – 8 May 1903) was a French painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramist, and writer, whose work has been primarily associated with the Post-Impressionist and Symbolist movements. He was also an influ ...
known as '' Fruit on a Table with a Small Dog'' had been bought by a Fiat employee in 1975, at a railway lost-property sale, for 45,000 lira (about £32).
Bonnard features heavily in the 2005 Booker prize winning novel, ''The Sea'' by John Banville
William John Banville (born 8 December 1945) is an Irish novelist, short story writer, Literary adaptation, adapter of dramas and screenwriter. Though he has been described as "the heir to Marcel Proust, Proust, via Vladimir Nabokov, Nabokov", ...
. In the novel, the protagonist and art historian Max Morden is writing a book about Bonnard and discusses the painter's life and work throughout.
Bonnard is played by Vincent Macaigne and Marthe by Cécile de France
Cécile or Cecile is a female given name or surname.
People Given name
* Ce'cile (Cecile Charlton, born 1976), Jamaican musician
* Severin Cecile Abega (1955–2008), Cameroonian author
* Cécile Aubry (1928–2010), retired French film actres ...
in the 2023 French film directed by Martin Provost '' Bonnard, Pierre and Marthe'', which focuses on the couple's romance. The movie premiered at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival .
References and sources
References
Sources
*Amory, Dita, ed. (2009). ''Pierre Bonnard: The Late Still Lifes and Interiors''. New Haven: Yale University Press.
*Brodskaya, Nathalia (2011)
''Bonnard''. Parkstone International.
*Cogeval, Guy (2015). ''Bonnard''. Paris: Hazan, Malakoff.
*Cowling, Elizabeth; Mundy, Jennifer (1990). ''On Classic Ground: Picasso, Léger, de Chirico and the New Classicism 1910-1930''. London: Tate Gallery.
*Frèches-Thory, Claire, & Perucchi-Petry, Ursula, ed.: ''Die Nabis: Propheten der Moderne'', Kunsthaus Zürich & Grand Palais, Paris & Prestel, Munich 1993
*Hyman, Timothy (1998). ''Bonnard''. London: Thames & Hudson.
*
*Smith, Roberta
*Turner, Elizabeth Hutton (2002). ''Pierre Bonnard: Early and Late.'' London: Phillip Wilson.
*Whitfield, Sarah; Elderfield, John (1998). ''Bonnard''. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
External links
*
"Complicated Bliss" by Jed Perl, ''The New Republic'', 1 April 2009
Works by Pierre Bonnard
(public domain in Canada)
*
* Exhibition catalogue
''Pierre Bonnard''
Jill Newhouse Gallery, 4 - 26 May 2023
* Exhibition catalogue
''Pierre Bonnard: Affinities''
Jill Newhouse Gallery (Curated by Karen Wilkin), 27 February - 4 March 2018
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bonnard, Pierre
1867 births
1947 deaths
People from Fontenay-aux-Roses
Académie Julian alumni
Art Nouveau painters
19th-century French painters
19th-century French male artists
French male painters
20th-century French painters
20th-century French male artists
Lycée Louis-le-Grand alumni
Nabis (art)
French Post-impressionist painters
School of Paris
Lycée Condorcet alumni
20th-century French printmakers
Members of the Royal Academy of Belgium
Honorary members of the Royal Academy