Too much stuff
makes me nervous. Just as I don’t like crowds, I don’t like crowded rooms.
Freud’s office in Vienna tells me its occupant was nuts. And yet some of my
favorite paintings are densely decorated interiors painted by Vuillard. I
picked up another book from the library’s discard cart: Elizabeth Wynne Easton’s
The Intimate Interiors of Edouard
Vuillard (Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1989). His rooms are sumptuously
colored. His people, usually women, become part of the interior decoration.
Consider Large Interior with Six Persons
(1897). So many colors and contrasting patterns ought to be a mess. Vuillard fills
his frame with endlessly interesting detail. Easton quotes a lengthy passage
from Vuillard’s journal written in 1894. The painter wakes in the morning and
surveys his room. He makes a long inventory of objects, including “the hinges, my
clothes at the foot of the bed; the four elegant green leaves in a pot, the
inkwell, the books, the curtains of the other window, the walls of the court
through it,” and so on. Then he writes:
“I was
struck by the abundance of ornament in all these objects. They are what one
calls in bad taste and if they were not familiar to me they might be unbearable.
It’s a chance to think about this label ‘in bad taste’ that I am quick to say
and that keeps me from looking. There I was looking and nothing gave my nerves
a shock on the surface, I took interest in each of their qualities, and that
was enough to push away distaste.”
Vuillard
sees a poignancy even in the tacky and banal. I still prefer my surrounding
stripped-down, but a Vuillard interior is like to an alien and beautiful world.
I think of these lines from W.H. Auden’s “Canzone” (1942):
“We are
created from and with the world
To suffer
with and from it day by day:
Whether we
meet in a majestic world
Of solid
measurements or a dream world
Of swans and
gold, we are required to love
All homeless
objects that require a world.”
1 comment:
You may be surprised to learn that those four qualities of good writing are lifted literally from chapter headings of “Style”, lectures delivered at Cambridge by F.L.Lucas. I just spent an enjoyable week reading this sane and humorous book.
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