Foliage—Oak Tree and Fruit Seller

Description

Lush vegetation dominates this view from a window of Edouard Vuillard’s summer residence outside Paris, with the sturdy trunk of an oak tree bisecting the scene. Instead of oil paint Vuillard used distemper, a mix of dry pigment and melted glue. With this medium he created a textured surface with myriad nuanced colors to evoke a tapestry-like wall decoration.

Vuillard belonged to the generation of artists after the Impressionists, known broadly as Post-Impressionists. Impressionism’s continued influence can be seen here in the loose brushstrokes, the use of color to evoke light and atmosphere, and the subject of women and children in a garden.

Provenance

Commissioned from the artist by Georges Bernheim, Paris, 1918; Roger Darnetal, Paris; Daniel Varenne, Geneva; Nathan Cummings, New York, on loan to the US Embassy in Paris from December 1969 to May 1970; on loan to the Federal Reserve Board, Washington D.C., from 11May 1972 to 12 August 1981; Sara Lee Corporation, Chicago, 1981; Millennium Gift of the Sara Lee Corporation to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1999.

Foliage—Oak Tree and Fruit Seller

Édouard Jean Vuillard

1918

Accession Number

153705

Medium

Distemper on canvas

Dimensions

193 × 283.2 cm (76 × 111 1/2 in.); Framed: 205.8 × 294.7 cm (81 × 116 in.)

Classification

painting

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

A Millennium Gift of Sara Lee Corporation