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Pierre Bonnard’s Luminous Late Interiors Open At Met January 27

Pierre Bonnard (French, 1867–1947), "Basket of Fruit: Oranges and Persimmons,” circa 1940, oil on canvas, 21¾ by 29¼ inches. Private collection ©2008 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.
Pierre Bonnard (French, 1867–1947), "Basket of Fruit: Oranges and Persimmons,” circa 1940, oil on canvas, 21¾ by 29¼ inches. Private collection ©2008 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.
:The first exhibition to focus entirely on the radiant late interiors and still life paintings of Pierre Bonnard (1867–1947) will open January 27 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. "Pierre Bonnard: The Late Interiors," running to April 19 in the museum's Robert Lehman Wing, will feature 80 paintings, drawings and watercolors that date from 1923 to 1947, when Bonnard centered his painting activity in Le Cannet, a hill town in the south of France. Working in his modest house overlooking the Mediterranean, Bonnard's paintings transformed the rooms and objects that surrounded him into dazzling images infused with intense light.

It is these luminous late interiors that define Bonnard's modernism and prompt a reappraisal of his reputation in the history of Twentieth Century art. Among the 45 paintings, 16 watercolors and gouaches and 19 drawings and sketches in the exhibition are numerous rarely seen works from private collections, as well as loans from prominent museums in Europe and the United States. The exhibition will also reunite several pictures that once hung side-by-side on Bonnard's studio wall in Le Cannet.

More modern than is commonly recognized, the late work of Bonnard is remarkable for the artist's individualistic approach to color, light, perspective and composition — particularly as seen in his interiors and still lifes. Although less well known than his paintings of bathers, Bonnard's late interiors and still life paintings are equally extraordinary. Over the course of 24 years of painting the simply furnished, familiar rooms of his house at Le Cannet, Bonnard discovered infinite possibilities, much as Paul Cézanne had discovered in the landscape of Mont Sainte-Victoire. The exhibition will feature the artist's finest interiors, including "Corner of the Dining Room at Le Cannet," "The White Interior" and "The French Window," all from 1932.

Pierre Bonnard "The Table,” 1925, oil on canvas, 40½ by 29¼ inches. Tate Museum. Presented by the Courtauld Fund Trustees 1926. ©Tate, London 2008 ©2008 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.
Pierre Bonnard "The Table,” 1925, oil on canvas, 40½ by 29¼ inches. Tate Museum. Presented by the Courtauld Fund Trustees 1926. ©Tate, London 2008 ©2008 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.
Bonnard's late interiors and still lifes explore a multitude of nuanced color relationships among glowing yellows, violets, reds, oranges, greens and whites, as in "Basket of Fruit: Oranges and Persimmons," circa 1940, and "Bouquet of Mimosas," circa 1945. His images of fruits and bread baskets, teapots and milk jugs, in such paintings as "Breakfast," circa 1930, and "The Dessert, 1940, transcend domestic narratives to speak of the artist's process of creating pictures through a masterful orchestration of color and light.

Although Bonnard's subjects were close at hand, he rarely painted directly from life, relying instead on pencil drawings sketched rapidly in little diaries. Four of the artist's diaries from his years at Le Cannet will be loaned by the Bibliothèque national de France, Paris. The diary notations lay out idiosyncratic marks as reminders of color, tone, intensity and contrast.

These shorthand sketches were critical to the genesis of large-scale paintings, which Bonnard developed slowly, through a process of continual editing and revision. He often worked on several paintings at once, tacking the unstretched canvases to his studio wall in order to allow for alteration of the periphery of the painting and its overall proportions.

In creating his paintings, the artist deferred to the memory of perception. His interest lay in exploring how diverse objects interrelate within a pictorial field, rather than dwelling on the literalness of any object or figure. For instance, in the paintings "Still Life with Ham," 1940, and "Young Women in the Garden (Renée Monchaty and Marthe Bonnard) ," circa 1921–23, reworked 1945–46, equal attention is paid to every component of a painting. Negative spaces are as important as positive forms, thus achieving a kind of "overallness" in the composition.

Pierre Bonnard "Corner of the Dining Room at Le Cannet,” 1932, oil on canvas, 31 7/8 by 35 3/8 inches. Centre Pompidou, Paris. Musée national d'art moderne/ Centre de création industrielle. State Purchase, 1933. ©CNAC/MNAM/Dist. Réunion des Musées Nationaux/Art Resource, NY ©2008 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.
Pierre Bonnard "Corner of the Dining Room at Le Cannet,” 1932, oil on canvas, 31 7/8 by 35 3/8 inches. Centre Pompidou, Paris. Musée national d'art moderne/ Centre de création industrielle. State Purchase, 1933. ©CNAC/MNAM/Dist. Réunion des Musées Nationaux/Art Resource, NY ©2008 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.
Bonnard created a body of work that became less obviously descriptive and more metaphoric over time. The artist played with conventions of perspective and proportion and intensified the relationships among objects and figures to a disquieting effect. Bonnard's paintings often convey a feeling of forbidden sights, as if one is trespassing among private or intimate settings. In "Before Dinner," 1924, the figures, though physically present, are emotionally absent.

In later paintings figures become peripheral, even lacking corporeality. Some figures begin to disappear off the picture plane, as in "Dining Room Overlooking the Garden [The Breakfast Room]," 1930–31, and "Table in Front of the Window," 1934–35. Through a shimmering palette of intense, pulsating colors and a fluid interaction between foreground and background, the forms and spaces of Bonnard's still lifes and interiors are not still at all, but quietly transient.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art is at 1000 Fifth Avenue. For information, 212-535-7710 or www.metmuseum.org .

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