Save on Framed Art and Canvas Prints Pictures to Art
Save 5% More...

Edouard Vuillard Wall Art

Sort By:
10 Items
1
The Family After a Meal, 1891 Fine Art Print
The Family After a Meal, 1891
22" x 15"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $41.99
The Canape, c. 1920 Fine Art Print
The Canape, c. 1920
20" x 23"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $65.99
Two Women Under a Lamp, 1892 Fine Art Print
Two Women Under a Lamp, 1892
16" x 13"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $34.99
The Dentist Louis Viau in His Office, 1937 Fine Art Print
The Dentist Louis Viau in His Office, 1937
14" x 15"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $35.99
The House of Mallarme at Valvins Fine Art Print
The House of Mallarme at Valvins
14" x 15"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $35.99
The Lullaby - Marie Roussel in Bed Late 1894 Fine Art Print
The Lullaby - Marie Roussel in Bed Late 1894
24" x 13"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $41.99
Still Life with Salad, c. 1890 Fine Art Print
Still Life with Salad, c. 1890
22" x 16"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $48.99
Little Girls Playing, 1894 Fine Art Print
Little Girls Playing, 1894
12" x 30"
+ Multiple Sizes
Price: $52.99
Sort By:
10 Items
1
Edouard Vuillard (born November 11, 1868) was a French decorator, printmaker, and painter. This Cuiseaux born artist studied art at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and the Académie Julian in Paris from 1886 to 1888. Vuillard is particularly known for his depictions of intimate interior scenes. In 1889 he joined a group of art students that included Felix Valloton, Ker-Xavier Roussel, Paul Serusier, Pierre Bonnard and Maurice Denis. They called themselves the Nabis, and they drew their inspiration from the paintings by Paul Gauguin, a renowned artist of their time. The Nabis applied their paint in ways that emphasized the flat surface of the canvas and advocated a symbolic approach to color. They were inspired to use strong contours and simplified shapes by the Japanese woodcuts, which were in vogue in Europe by then.

Many of Vuillard’s works dealt with dressmaking and domestic scenes set in his mother’s bourgeois home. He often created flattened space by filling his compositions with the contrasting rich patterns of women’s dresses and wallpaper. Both Bonnard and Vuillard were also called Intimists because of their focus on intimate interior scenes. Apart from painting, Vuillard, was also involved in poster design, book illustration, and designs for the theater. To promote the production of Symbolist plays, he helped found a theater called Aurélien Lugné-Poë’s Théâtre de l’Oeuvre in 1893. Vuillard designed illustrated programs and stage sets. In 1899, Vuillard began to paint in a more naturalistic style. That year, the Nabis exhibited together for the last time. Vuillard also executed two series stunning lithographs that revealed his appreciation of Japanese woodcuts.
Holiday Shipping times