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Toulouse-Lautrec and the Spirit of Montmartre
San
Francisco Legion of Honor |
|
A
fine new exhibit at the Legion of Honor started out as "The Spirit of
Montmartre" at the Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers University. Upon arrival at the
Legion, 65 Toulouse-Lautrec works from the collections of the Fine Arts Museums of San
Francisco were added and M. Toulouse-Lautrec's name was added to the title. The balance of
the exhibit shifts rather seismically, but it does so without obscuring its original
themes. And who would be ungrateful to see such a marvelous massing of Toulouse-Lautrec's
genius?
The original show, as represented by its fascinating catalogue,
was focused on the radical, avant garde community of artists and writers in Montmartre at
the end of the nineteenth century. Rather overshadowed in the art history books by the
Impressionists and Post Impressionists, The Spirit of Montmartre makes a
convincing case for the importance and influence of these creative people who came
together in groups known as The Hydropathes and the Incoherents. Rebelling against the
establishment L'Ecole des Beaux-Arts, their irreverent attitude and experimentation with
nontraditional media were centered in the cabarets of Montmartre where collaborative works
of drama, music, puppet shows, and the shadow theater--a precursor of film--were an
integral part of the partying milieu. Illustrated journals, books, and other ephemera are
included in this exhibit as well as a collection of puppets and a video re-creation of the
shadow theater. Both the content and the forms of these works are seen as important
influences on later Dada and Surrealism as well as performance art.
The silhouettes of shadow theater (and the flat space of Japanse
prints) are integral elements of Toulouse-Lautrec's posters. "La Goulue," his
first poster (1891), uses silhouettes to define the crowd at the Moulin Rouge in the
background, sketches in the can-can dancer in the middleground with a wonderfully light,
energetic line, and fades the detail of the top-hatted figure in the foreground, reducing
it as well to near silhouette simplicity.
Divon Japponaise, an 1893 poster for another Montmartre establishment,
is centered by the figure of Jane Avril, not dancing here, but seated for a performance by
the singer Yvette Guilbert, seen (alas, decapitated by the frame) in the background. The
flowing curves of Avril's gown are captured as a contained field of flat black. Her
modish, feathered hat creates a pattern of Rorschachian complexity, but the continued use
of the flat black of the dress unifies the whole into a pleasing composition.
"Troupe de Mille Eglantine" celebrates the cancan line; as in "La Goulue" the raised skirts
and ruffled petticoats are suggested with the most economical of lines, while attention is
drawn to the high-kicking legs and booted feet with the contrast of dark color. Seen
close-up, each dancer's face is an individualized portrait: the not-so-glamorous look of
hard-working nighttime women.
In a very different mood, "Aristide Bruant," a singer
of satirical songs and laments on the struggles of the poor, is immortalized in
Toulouse-Lautrec's poster for Ambassadeurs. Yet again, the strong sweep of a black cape
creates the weight of the composition, with a broad brimmed hat framing the face and
the dashing red of a scarf swept around the neck providing bright contrast at the
very center. A silhouetted figure in the background adds a layer of depth.
Another delightful piece, "La Loge," looks up at a woman
in a box at the theater, containing the subject in just one quartile of the composition.
She's peering through her opera glasses at the show; her red bow-lips are in sharp
contrast to her pale skin and a perky hat suggests a a touch of style. The diagonal curve
of the box front energizes the print.
There's a lot of material by other artists--some delightful costume
designs by Henry Gerbault; unexpected black and white drawings by Pierre Bonnard, known
more widely for his richly colored, flower-filled paintings; posters by Jules Grun and
Maxime Dethomas. There's a wondrous panoramic photo-mural of Le Moulin de la Gallette
which virtually invites the viewer into the party for a dance.
But Toulouse-Lautrec's artistic brilliance dominates the exhibit. The
history is fascinating, but from a purely aesthetic point of view none here can compete
with the energy, the wit, the unerring vision and the exuberant creativity that overflow
from his works.
- Arthur
Lazere