In his darkly suggestive paintings and graphically spare prints, Félix Vallotton created some of the most resonant images of fin-de-siècle Paris. Arriving in the city from his native Lausanne at the age of sixteen, the Swiss artist captured acerbic vignettes of bourgeois Parisian life, from the bustling, acquisitive crowds of the Bon Marché department store to illicit liaisons behind closed doors. He also created delicate still-lifes, nudes and portraits of family life, all imbued with a potent edge of disquiet.
c o nt r i b utor s Dita Amory is Curator in Charge and Administrator of the Robert Lehman Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Philippe Büttner is Keeper of the Collection at Kunsthaus Zürich Ann Dumas is Curator at the Royal Academy of Arts, London Patrick McGuinness is a novelist and poet, and Professor of French and Comparative Literature at the University of Oxford Katia Poletti is Curator at Fondation Félix Vallotton, Lausanne Christian Rümelin is Keeper of Prints and Drawings at Cabinet d’arts graphiques du Musée d’art et d’histoire, Geneva Belinda Thomson is a freelance art historian and Honorary Professor in History of Art at the University of Edinburgh
on the c ov e r : The Visit (La Visite), 1899 (detail of cat. 27) Distemper on cardboard, 55.5 × 87 cm Kunsthaus Zürich. Acquired 1899
Félix Vallotton
This volume considers Vallotton’s astonishingly original oeuvre, bringing together over fifty of his paintings, along with many of his most important print series, depicting subjects ranging from street demonstrations to the horror of the First World War. In authoritative essays exploring Vallotton’s innovative techniques and his complex position in the history of early modern art, the authors bring to life the work of this perpetually unsettling artist.
Félix Félix
Vallotton Vallotton