Two Decorations: Renoir and Vuillard

Interesting online lecture from the National Gallery looking at two sets of paintings by Renoir and Vuillard that were painted for decorative schemes.

Belle Smith started talking about “The Dancing Girls” By Renoir from 1909. She explained how the two pictures were commissioned by Maurice Gagnat for his Paris apartment. She talked about who the models were and one of their memories of it in later life. She discussed how the works fitted into his oeuvre and how the displayed Orientalism.

Smith then looked at “Terrasse at Vasouy” by Vuillard, again two pictures painted in 1901 and reworked in the 1930s. She talked about how they were commissioned as one picture by Jean Schopfer and included people from the literary circle around Thadee and Misia Natanson. She discussed how they were painted in distemper, basically glue with pigment in it and how this gave a more matt effect. She then looked at why the picture was split in the 1930s and how Vuillard reworked it.

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