Pierre Bonnard Biography
Pierre
Bonnard was born October 3 in France in 1867, and educated in the
law, Pierre Bonnard decided to become an artist in 1888, attending
art school even as he practiced law. By 1890, he was painting full
time.
Pierre Bonnard's early work was created in the climate of Symbolist
thought. During the 1890's, he was a member of the Nabis, a group
of artists under the influence of Paul Gauguin and Paul Sérusier
who sought to restore a purely decorative dimension to painting.
Emphasizing flat areas of color and strong lines, Bonnard painted
small interiors, nudes and café scenes as well as large decorative
works, tapestries, and graphics.
By 1910, Pierre Bonnard turned away from intimate works and left
Paris for the south of France. By 1915, he had changed the pictorial
structure in his paintings without losing the strong color, changes
that reflected Cubism. The subjects are always simple, but he rendered
a sun-drenched landscape or a table laden with fruit and flowers
with luminous color and intriguing compositions.
From the end of the 1920's until his death, Bonnard's subject matter
hardly varied. He painted still lifes, self-portraits, his wife
Marthe, seascapes, and views of his garden at Le Cannet, all with
intense color. His subject was always private life and fragile intimacy
in the bedroom, the dining room, the bathroom, and the garden, a
life in which Bonnard was both voyeur and participant. He also used
the image, clothed and nude, of his wife Marthe who never seemed
to age over the decades that she posed for her husband. She appears
in the garden, in the dining room, reflections in mirrors and while
in the bathtub. Pierre Bonnard died January 23, 1947 in Le Cannet,
France.
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