BY ÉDITIONS d'art ALBERT SKIRA, I956.
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Famous
by Great
Places as seen
Painters
new group of volumes in "The Taste of Our
Time" séries reveals how much some spots of earth,
some famous cities, owe to painters who hâve loved
them, and how many artists hâve discovered in a
spécial harmony between skies and buildings the
secret of a new light, new ways of painting. With
This
windmills and vineyards Montmartre was just a
country village at the beginning of the i9th century
and, though now absorbed by Paris, is still a little
world apart, a favorite resort of painters, writers and
musicians in quest of quiétude and "atmosphère.'*
Crowned by the Sacré-Cœur, the hill-top is a place
of prayer and méditation, while after dark the lower
slopes glitter with the lights of Montmartre's nightlife. And many a painter of genius has evoked the
richly varied aspects of the very différent worlds
its
happy hlend of town and country, Montmartre bas always been no less
appreciated hy lovers of romantic solitude than bj addicts of its nightlife.
For
no ordinarj suburb ; though a reluctant victim of the tentacular
development of Paris, Montmartre bas lost notbing of its ^^personality^''
it is
none of tbe glamour of a legendary past tbat
chronique scandaleuse and martjrology.
is
a curions mixture of the
As regards the origin of the name, several théories hâve been put
forward, but the obvious explanation that it is a French form of
—
mons martyrum
or '-^Mount of Martyrs^''
—
is
most probably
correct,
and it is generally thought that the name commémorâtes the martyrdom
of St Denis and his deacons, Sts Rusticus and Eleutherius. According
to that early historian of the Franks St Gregorj of Tours, St Denis
was sent to Gaul during the reign of the Emperor De cius ( 24^-2} i),
became the first bishop of Paris and '^having undergone many torments
in the cause of his Redeemer rvas put to death by the sword'^ But it
is also possible that the name refers to those unknown martyrs whose
re mains were buried at the summit of Montmartre hill (the '-'Butté'^) ;
a possibility borne out by fragments of inscriptions brought to light on
fuly /;?, 1611, by workmen excavating the crypt of the so-called
^'Holy Martyrs^ Chapel,'^ adhère St Ignatius of Loyola and his six
companions took vows of poverty and chastity'^.
The soil of the Butte was rieh in gypsum (the famous "p laster of
Paris'') and in Merovingian times there were dwellers on the hill, which
was
then surrounded by
swamps
andforests. In the early Middle
Ages a
group of Bénédictine nuns took up résidence in the church on the summit,
and
thereafter
Montmartre was administered by
the dynasty
of noble
memory survives in the name of one of its public squares.
was
The
famous ail over France almost^ indeed^ too famous ;
gifts poured in from ail parts of the countrj and in this atmosphère of
abhesses whose
—
convent
luxurj the marais of the nuns deteriorated. We mil not dwell on the
is reputed to hâve made in the
stay that gayest of monarchs Henri
IV
Abbaye aux Dames, the big, thatch-roofed édifice at the junction of
Rue du Mont-Cenis and Rue Saint-Vincent, ivhen in his opérations
against Paris he made Montmartre his headquarters. But there can be
no question that the abbesses treated Montmartre as their fief and,
intoxicated by poncer, forgot the exigencies of their vocation. Order jvas
not restored until successive archbishops had taken vigorous action,
followed by the
efforts
of two ^ealous disciplinarians, St Francis of Sales
and St Vincent of Paul. Later, when in terms of an agreement signed
at the Ahbey and in considération of an annuity of tivo hundred thousand
crowns ^, Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine, had been forced to accept
the conditions of peace
upper convent
mth
the
imposed by Louis
Abbaye
in
a
XIV,
single
the la tter united the
community.
So much for the Butte Sacrée, the ''Sacred HilP' of long ago.
Let us turn now to the other side of the picture.
Before the Révolution there used to be a tavern in Rue de Clichy
called
La Grande
Pinte, ivhere heartless ?nothers came to sell their
—
had 'follies^^ i.e. country
in the neighborhood. The Montmartre guinguettes,
so named after a certain Guinget n>ho had kept a famous tavern in
the Ménilmontant district, were the scène of gay nocturnal frolics, and
their signboards flaunted such alluring names as Au Veau qui tette.
Au Berger galant, A la Fontaine d'Amour.
During the Révolution Marat hid in the Montmartre quarries,
ivhence he edited the revolutionary news-sheet L'Ami du Peuple. Under
the Terror projects were made for renaming the ''Mount of Martyrs^"*
but, though the first mayor of the new commune, Félix Desportes, made
haste to suppress and tear down the Abbaye, the new name proposed,
daughters
to
the
pleasure-houses—
^"^Mount
Marat^^
wealthy
officiais
n^ho
fat le d to gain currency.
Another
historié
association
calls
for mention hère
:
the
heroic
défense of the Clichj toll-gate in
1814 when, retreating before the Allies,
Joseph Bonaparte gave four hmdred dragoons of the National Guard,
commanded by Marshal Moncey^ the order to bar the way to the army
of Silesia, twenty thousand strong a feat of arms immortalit^ed bj the
artist Horace Vernet 3. The Russians were repulsed time and again
before, finalIj, theji broke through into the market-place and overcame the
—
HORACE VERNET. DEFENSE OF PARIS AT THE CLICHY TOLL-GATE,
182O.
gallant
making a last, desperate stand beside
named for the fineness of its flour) // was
ten years la ter Dehraj^ ajoung man who had heen ivounded
Montmartre
Fin mill
the Blute
there that
millers
(so
.
in the Battle of the Butte, set
farm
into
down
ivith
up a
dance-hall, after converting the old
a tavern, where home-made galettes (griddlecakes) washed
Montmartre
claret were served by the
former farm-girls.
This îvas not the only occasion when Montmartre made historj.
It was at a banquet at
delles (noiP
of
^
Rue
Le
Petit Château-Rouge in Place des Hiron-
Christiani) that the movement leading to the Révolution
48 began; and,
March
again, on
18, i8yi, the
Rue du Chevalier
Barre (then Rue des Rosiers) jpas the scène of the outbreak
of the Paris Commune. Some years later, to purge Montmartre of its
réputation as a place of disorderly living and a hotbed of révolution, and
de la
in
memory of Father Eudes
ivho in
i6yo, preaching on the Butte, had
bidden the French nation dedicate itself to the Sacred Heart, it was
décide d to
build the great basilica,
Notre-Dame du Sacré-Cœur,
inaugurated on June j, i8pi, ivhich now looks proudly down on Paris
and which, mth
characteristic irrévérence, the
Montmartrois promptly
bapti:(ed '-'Notre-Dame de la Galette
Always, when we peruse
the history of
Montmartre, we fînd
mingling of faith and frivolity, of Villonesque loose living
courage, combined mth
mth
this
high
a propensity for mllful eccentricity, verging on the
Middle Ages. And there is
grotesque, almost in the spirit of the late
had acquired
a danger spot for the
of the ipth century, when Georges
Michel, Montmartre" s first landscape-artist, was painting its windmills.
no doubt that
it
the réputation of
inoffensive bourgeois at the beginning
GEORGES MICHEL. VIEW OF MONTMARTRE.
THE FIRST PICTURES OF MONTMARTRE
Georges Michel, born in Paris on January 12, 1763, we hâve
unworthy precursor of Jongkind and Impressionism,
as is proved by his watercolor sketch View of Montmartre
(Louvre)*. For his contemporaries, however, he was merely
an eccentric artist who sometimes earned an honest penny by
restoring pictures. When he was only fîfteen he ran away with
a young laundress and had to go into hiding to escape reprisais
from her outraged parents. His first child was born when he
was sixteen; by the time he was twenty he had five. Ail trace of
IN
a not
II
him is lost until 1783 when he was doing his military service
in Normandy; the colonel of his régiment took him under his
wing, promoted him lieutenant and encouraged him to paint.
While in the army he sent ail his pay to his family. He seems to
hâve been away from Paris during the Révolution, perhaps in
Switzerland, whence he returned a few days before the storming
of the
Bastille.
One of his closest friends was a ne'er-do-well
who after throwing an unfaithful mistress
painter, Bruandet,
from
a
window went
to cover in the Forest of Fontainebleau,
THEODORE ROUSSEAU. STORM EFFECT. VIEW OF MONTMARTRE.
12
his seclusion to account by making sketches
of the woodlands. As for Michel, he seems to hâve mended his
ways as he grew older.
Michel was known as the "Ruysdael of Montmartre," though
his brushstrokes were less carefully directed and more thickly
charged than those of the Haarlem Master. But he, too, indulged
in efïects of livid light striking through clouds, and often placed,
well in the foreground, a windmill on a hillside outlined against
the sky. Still Michel had little or no success. "The public did not
appreciate his deep organ-notes; the textural richness and originality of his scènes of Belleville and Montmartre, that thick
impasto in which we sensé his joy in modeling, were lost on
his contemporaries. Equally unrecognized were the freshness
and delightful ease of his crayon sketches, often imbued with
where he turned
open spaces." ^
Michel coUaborated with De Marne, a fairly successful genre
painter of the time, and sometimes brushed in his landscape
backgrounds. "Do as you please," he told him. "You know my
views and how little a signature means to me. In fact I make
a fine feeling for vast
my pictures. To my mind, a painting
should speak for itself."
Michel was an indefatigable hiker. Often at nightfall he was
seen returning with his wife from long walks in Montmartre
and the neighborhood. When she died he remarried, and it was
his second wife who, after his death on June 7, 1843, ^^ ^he âge
of eighty, of a paralytic stroke, told Sensier the story of his
career as a painter. During his last years he was fairly prosperous
and owned a house at 2, Avenue de Ségur, where he turned out
a steady stream of pictures.
manuscript found amongst his widow's papers tells us
sometliing of his appearance and habits. He was loosely built,
with an elongated torso and spindle legs had black eyes and
hair, a bulbous nose and a large mouth. He always placed his
a point of never signing
A
;
13
keys under his pillow when he went to bed, worshipped the
"Suprême Being" of the rationalists (though in extremis he
thought better of it and reverted to the God of his forefathers),
admired Rembrandt and detested the old régime.
After his death our "Michel of Montmartre" who had prided
himself on never wandering far from the wings of "his" windmills was completely forgotten. Amongst those who, later,
recognized his merits were two painters, Jeanron and Charles
Jacque, and the critic Théophile Thoré, fîrst to publish an
account of his life and work^. Sainte-Beuve speaks of "that
poor devil of a French landscape-painter, who had so fine a
feeling for, and love of, simple things." Théodore Rousseau
to
whom we are indebted for a picture, softly veined with green,
of Montmartre seen from the Saint-Denis Plain (also known
as Storm Ejfect)
took a less favorable view of his colleague
and precursor. "I enjoy his careless, hasty productions well
enough, but I fear that presently we shall hâve a crowd of
imitators of friend Michel, practitioners of slapdash art. It's the
thin edge of the wedge." Presumably Rousseau had not seen
MicheFs watercolor sketches. Alfred Sensier was better advised
when he remarked that Michel's art "often rises above the earthbound and evokes to superb effect the far-flung splendor of
the sky." True, Millet's biographer was often over-generous
—
—
in his appraisals;
still I
am
inclined to think that hère
a jus ter estimate of the artist Michel really was:
many
occasions, in his simple way,
of the Barbizon Schook
In 1820 when Géricault was
Martyrs, one of his neighbors was
two years, who, loyal Bonapartist
one
we hâve
who on
anticipated the achievements
living in the Chaussée des
Horace Vernet,
his elder
by
that he was, did not fail to
paint a Défense of Paris ^ celebrating the heroic exploit described
in an earlier page. None of those who saw Géricault riding
by
14
in the early 'twenties, "his paintbox
hooked
to the
pommel
THÉODORE GÉRICAULT. THE PLASTER
We
KILN,
1
822-1 824.
from Clément, Géricault's biographer, that one day when the
was taking a walk in Montmartre in the company of his inséparable
companion, the painter Dedreux-Dorcy, he suddenly stopped to gaze at the
old farm in which the kiln was located, "enveloped in a grey cloud of dust
under a lowering sky, with some horses eating their humble pittance in
the foreground. He was struck by the melancholy of the scène, a hasty
sketch of which he made then and there. On returning to his studio he
painted this admirable little picture" now in the Louvre, a work which
foreshadowed what was later to bc called Realism.
learn
artist
15
of his saddle," can hâve thought that the athletic young artist
was so near his end. One day when he had gone with his friend
Dedreux-Dorcy to Clignancourt, to visit a factory producing
artificial jewels in which he was interested, his horse fell at the
toll-gate in the Chaussée des Martyrs. He was severely injured
and after being confined to his bed for many months he died on
'^
January 25, 1824.
ETIENNE BOUHOT. ST PETER's CHURCH, MONTMARTRE, CA. 1825.
16
In the heyday of Romanticism Montmartre provided artists
with many motifs exactly to their taste: a ruined convent,
windmills, springs and streams, a typical "folly" in the Château
des Brouillards, and the old St Peter's Church
made by an
artist
(Corot's senior
by
of the
Morvan
sixteen years),
whose
"portrait"
région, Etienne
still exists.
Bouhot
Art students and
young women of relatively easy virtue, the latter often riding
donkeys, flocked to the Moulin de la Galette, formerly known
as the "Blute Fin." Annexed to the mill was a farmhouse-café
with shrubberies and lawns for dancing.
Among
those who, some years later, were familiar figures
on the Butte and in the grassy streets of Montmartre
were Alphonse Karr (then a youth of twenty) and his friend
at the cafés
the draftsman-lithographer Guillaume- Sulpice Chevalier
who
subsequently became famous under the pseudonym "Gavarni."
The
latter lived at 33,
—
Rue
des Rosiers, alongside the so-called
—
"Telegraph Tower" a sémaphore station that was erected in
1795 above the apse of St Peter's Church. Gavarni was first of
that lineage of cartoonists, witty chroniclers in black-and-white,
who up to the time of Steinlen and Forain made Montmartre
their headquarters. Though an excellent pain ter, Gavarni
specialized more and more as time went on in work of an
anecdotal, literary order.
Gérard de Nerval,
who
lived for
some time on
the Butte,
has given us a colorful pen-picture of Montmartre in the
mid-i9th century. "Hère," he wrote, "are windmills, cabarets,
rustic pleasances, quiet little streets lined with cottages, farms
and half-wild gardens, meadows diversified with miniature
précipices and springs gushing from the clayey soil, oases of
verdure in which goats frolic under the watchful eyes of the
little girls, sure-footed as mountaineers, who mind them. We
even come on tiny vineyards, last reminders of that famous
Montmartre wine which in the days of the Romans vied with
17
the vintages of Argenteuil and Suresnes. Every year this
quarry."
And
row of
humble
stunted vine-plants, engulfed in a
elsewhere Nerval describes Montmartre in words
hillside loses a
its
might apply to a painting by Michel: "Nothing could be
lovelier than the view of Montmartre Hill when sunlight is
playing on its rich red-ochre soil veined with clay and plaster,
on its bare rocks and clumps of trees still wearing their summer
finery, on winding gullies and narrow footpaths. How many
artists, after failing for the Prix de Rome, hâve come hère to
seek new inspiration from this picturesque countryside!" ^ And
later, when he left Dr Blanche's nursing home, once known
that
as the "Folie- Sandrin," in the
Rue de Norvins,
the author of
Bohême Galante and that strange prose-poem Aurélia (he
had lived for a time in the Château des Brouillards) was
delighted to be back again on his beloved Butte and to forgather
with his friends the tramps who had recently ensconced themselves in the huge drainpipes then being laid, "last home of
the vagabonds of Paris after the closing of the quarries." It
was thanks to the good offices of the French Authors' League
that Nerval had obtained his release from the mental hospital in
the autumn of 1854, after his third attack of insanity. A few
months later ^ in the dead of a winter's night he hanged himself
from a street lamp.
So much for painting and literature; let us now turn to
music. In 1834 Berlioz rented the house in Rue Saint-Denis, at
the corner of Rue Saint- Vincent, where he lived in romantic
I^a
seclusion with Henrietta Smithson, the highly temperamental
who had
consented to become his
make ends meet,
Berlioz did musical criticism for periodicals. Liszt and Chopin,
Alfred de Vigny and Eugène Sue were among the rare visitors
of the composer of Benvenuto Cellini and the Requiem for
General Damrémont. But the marriage was a dismal failure;
Irish actress
wife.
18
They were
at
long
last
desperately poor and, to
CAMILLE COROT. THE MOULIN DE LA GALETTE AT MONTMARTRE,
1
84O.
840 Berlioz parted from his wife and moved to lodgings in
she took rooms in Rue Saint- Vincent
facing the cerne tery in which, fourteen years later, she was
destined to be interred.
It was also in 1840 that Corot painted The Moulin de la
Galette at Montmartre (Geneva Muséum), unquestionably the
fîrst really great picture on this thème. It has a soft slate-blue
in
1
Rue de Londres, while
19
sheen flushing into pink, a délicate translucency, that holds me
spellbound every time I stand before this wholly delightful
canvas. Corot's houses, in particular, hâve a quality unique in
the painting of his day. Built, one feels, to last for ever, beside
a road eut in the chalky soil and overlooked by the windmill
whose dark sails emphasize the far-flung radiance of earth and
sky, thèse houses prove how vast was the révolution effected,
after a long period of dark-hued painting, by that modest
artist
in a
workman's smock who,
long before Utrillo, ranks
of stone walls.
among
LOUIS DAGUERRE. GENERAL VIEW OF PARIS
20
folio wing
the
most
Vermeer and
sensitive painters
FROM MONTMARTRE,
CA. 183O.
ANTOINE VOLLON. THE MOULIN DE LA GALETTE, CA. 1860.
21
CAMILLE COROT. RUE SAINT-VINCENT, MONTMARTRE, CA. 185O-1860.
22
Chronologically ail the windmill pictures mentdoned above
between those of Michel and Vollon's Moulin de la Galette
(Musée Carnavalet, Paris), which was painted when he was
twenty-seven and had not yet fully mastered his technique.
Within this period falls the General View of Paris seen from the
Montmartre Windmills by Louis Daguerre who, besides being one
lie
PAUL CÉZANNE. RUE DES SAULES, MONTMARTRE, 1867-1869.
23
NAPOLÉON-JOSEPH BELLARDEL. RUE d'oRCHAMPT, MONTMARTRE, 1864.
of the pioneers of photography, was no mean painter. Lastly,
mention must be made of Michel' s rival, Hoguet, the painter
born in Berlin of French parents whom Théophile Gautier
called "the Rembrandt of the windmills." After studying under
Ciceri, he went back to Germany in 1847^^.
The exact date of Corot' s Rue Saint-Vincent is a moot
point 1^. But we know that it was just at the time when he was
24
ARMAND GUILLAUMIN. MONTMARTRE,
1865.
beginning to shake off Corot's influence that Pissarro painted
The Telegraph Tower (1863). Next year, when he was about to
move from Montmorency
to his
new home
at
La Varenne
which
Saint-Hilaire, Pissarro painted his Street in Montmartre in
reveal
him
formed by
walls, houses and the road
of Cézanne. Evidently attracted by
painted, about 1867, his Rue des Saules, once
the interlocking planes
as a precursor
this motif, the latter
25
owned by Guillaumin, in which, as Lionello Venturi bas
pointed out, tbe artist's initial conception was in advance of
bis still somewbat ragged exécution.
About tbis time Guillaumin and Bellardel seem to bave
agreed to sbare out, so to speak, a block of bouses in Rue
d'Orcbampt, one taking over tbe bousefronts, tbe otber tbe
backyards. Tbese two pictures give us revealing glimpses of
Montmartre in tbe days wben it was in process of being
"modernized" but tbere still existed tiny gardens at tbe end of
courtyards in quite tbe Dutcb style. During tbis period Sisley,
wbo likewise took bis lead from Corot, painted a Vieiv of
Montmartre (Grenoble Muséum) in wbicb tbe trim, new, manystoried bouses strike a contrast witb tbe green luxuriance of tbe
little
orcbards.
Already tbe Sacred Hill was beginning to bave for painters
wbicb was to last for well over balf a
tbat curious fascination
century. Jongkind settled tbere in 1846. After sbaring a studio
witb Eugène Isabey, bis teacber, in Avenue Frocbot, be took
rooms fîrst in Place Pigalle, tben at 2, Impasse Caucbois, near
Place Blancbe. For over ten years Jongkind lived in tbis
district and we may be sure be often painted it. Tbe watercolor
self-portrait made in August 1850 sbows bim witb a portfolio
under bis arm and, wearing a big straw bat, about to sally
fortb in quest of subjects. Wbile in Montmartre, be struck up
friendsbips witb, amongst otbers, Alfred de Dreux, Constant
Troyon and Eugène Ciceri, Isabey's cousin. But Jongkind, beir
of Micbel at bis best in, tbat is to say, bis watercolors and
sketcbes Jongkind, forerunner of botb Impressionism and
Realism and a link between tbe two scbools, was born out
of bis due time. It was left to Manet and bis fellow revolutionaries, tben styled "Independents," to set on foot a movement
wbose importance was recognized only many years later.
—
—
26
THE BATIGNOLLES GROUP
circumstances favor
WHAT
and why should
it
another? There
is
the birth of a
new
school of
art,
originate in one place rather than
no question
that
topography and even
climatic conditions often play a leading part; but sometimes
ail
that
make
is
needed
is
for
some
artist
with a strong personality to
group of young men to
a local café his forum, or for a
—
occupy a nest of studios in some barnlike building and before
long the group has blossomed out into a School, winning
converts and sending forth its missionaries.
It was in the congenial atmosphère of the Café Guerbois
that the new painting of Manet's day took its rise. From 1866
on, the painters of the Independent School who were later to
be styled Impressionists and writers who championed the new
peinture claire made a habit of forgathering at this famous
café, located at 1 1 Grand'Rue des Batignolles (now Avenue de
Clichy), on almost the same site as the present-day Brasserie
Muller. By 1869 the group was at full strength. Actually it was
divided into two coteries: that of the ex-students of the
Académie Suisse, introduced by Bazille and Edmond Maître;
and that whose leading lights were Renoir and Claude Monet.
But ail alike gravitated around Manet and Degas, who were
usually to be seen at the café on Friday evenings, when a table
was regularly set aside for them. Occasionally Pissarro dropped
in for a talk, accompanied by Cézanne who often worked with
him in
he met
the country. But the latter had
—
little
liking for the
men
Guerbois "well-dressed nincompoops who look
like small-town lawyers."
Manet advised the members of his circle "to paint in patches
of light and to 'solmizate' the scale of values," and it was now
that thèse born fighters, undaunted by the abuse to which their
art and even their priva te lives were constantly subjected,
at the
27
mustered their forces in the cause of the new painting. Amongst
them Manet, a man of gentle birth and a revolutionary despite
himself, played the part of ringleader.
A famous picture has immortalized the devoted camaraderie of the little group in those years of struggle. I am thinking
of Fantin-Latour's canvas, The Studio at Les Batignolles, exhibited
at the 1870 Salon, which shows us several of the habitués of
the Café Guerbois. Despite the rather studied poses, the picture
is
a success artistically, as well as being of considérable docu-
interest, including as it does remarkably good portraits
of Manet and Renoir. Moreover certain novelties in the lay-out,
the way some of the motifs are truncated by the edge of the
canvas, foreshadow the composition à la japonaise that Degas
mentary
was
later to
It
employ so
may seem
skillfully.
surprising that Fantin-Latour did not include
himself in this picture, which he obviously intended as a sort
of "homage to Manet." Perhaps he did not wish to involve
himself too deeply in the new, revolutionary art movement.
pity he did not
—
A
turned out, admirable flower
painter though he was. Pantin soon lost his bearings in the
hazy symbolism of the Wagnerian cuit into which Edmond
Maître (who often played the piano in Bazille's studio) had ail
too successfully initiated him.
Early in January 1868 Frédéric Bazille left the rooms he
had been sharing with Renoir and Monet in Rue Visconti and
moved on to 9 Rue de la Paix (now Rue de la Condamine) in
the Batignolles district, where he worked hard ail day, readying
The Family Reunion and a still life for the 1868 Salon. In October
of the following year, on his return from Méric, near Montpellier, where he had spent the summer with his parents,
Bazille invited Renoir to come and share his studio. Almost
every evening the two friends dropped in at the Café Guerbois
or else repaired to Fantin's studio to sit for his big canvas.
28
for, as things
stupidities hâve finally given way to those of the
future," Fantin wrote to his friend Edwards, **and when the aversion for
Manet has blown over, my picture will be regarded simply as a studio interior,
with a painter making the portrait of a friend with other friends around
him." The painter, brush in hand, is Manet, and the model sitting in
front of him is Zacharie Astruc, a critic who staunchly defended the new
school of painting. Behind Manet, with his hands in his pockets, is the
German artist Schôlderer. Renoir, wearing a hat, is gazing at the canvas.
Then corne Zola, holding his pince-nez, Edmond Maître, Bazille (his
hands clasped behind his back) and Monet in the corner.
**When the present-day
THÉODORE FANTIN-LATOUR. THE STUDIO AT LES BATIGNOLLES,
187O.
29
FRÉDÉRIC BAZILLE. THE STUDIO, DETAIL: MONET, MANET, BAZILLE, 187O.
30
A
with the owner of the house was enough to décide
make another move. But before settling into his new
quarters (on the Left Bank, in the same house as Fantin-Latour),
he "amused himself" painting the interior of his Batignolles
studio, that "great grey room" ^^ where he had spent so many
happy evenings with his friends Renoir, Edmond Maître,
Claude Monet, Manet and Zola. He grouped them ail on his
tdfï"
Bazille to
FREDERIC BAZILLE. THE STUDIO, DETAIL: EDMOND MAITRE PLAYING
THE PIANO,
1870.
31
"My own
canvas.
likeness
was donc by Manet himself," he
letter. Thus we know that
proudly informed his parents in a
Manet was responsible
for the figure of Bazille,
who
is
shown
on
standing, holding his palette and brushes, beside the painting
an easel which Manet and Monet are inspecting. Ail in shades
of green and pink set off by the gilt frames of the pictures on the
walls, this canvas, with its textural richness and the distinctive
attitudes and gestures of the figures, reveals a psychological
insight and an evocative power surpassing that of Fantin's
picture, which indeed is slightly reminiscent of a group photo-
makes us realize Bazille's gift for pictorial conswhat he might hâve achieved had he not been killed
in 1870, at the âge of twenty-nine, in the Franco-Prussian War.
When the war ended, the Batignolles group, ail of whom
were much distressed by the death of their generous, warmhearted friend, started meeting again, but no longer at the
Guerbois, which had become unbearably noisy. Marcellin
Desboutins, one of its most constant patrons, spoke ruefully of
graph.
It also
truction and
"the steady stream of people in the Avenue de Clichy, the
way in Wepler's, Boivin's
and Père Lathuile's taverns and, on the way back, the brawling
boisterous drinking-parties across the
crowd of
bar."
^2
As
laundresses,
a resuit,
plumbers and cobblers in Dutrou's
the group began to patronize the
some of
Nouvelle-Athènes in Place Pigalle.
this café
was
its
One of the attractions of
work of Petit, a Mont-
ceiling décoration, the
martre flower-painter who was said to hâve given the Empress
Eugénie lessons in watercolor painting. Often to be seen there
at the "green hour" we now call cocktail- time were Manet,
Degas, Georges Rivière, the Belgian artist Alfred Stevens,
young Forain, Buhot, Goeneutte and, as a matter of course,
Desboutins. This artist had a studio in Rue des Dames, at the
end of a courtyard "echoing," as he said, "day in day out with
the din of carpenters and tin-smiths." ^* Desboutins always had
32
EDGAR DEGAS. THE ABSINTHE
(dETAIL), 1876-1877.
33
the same seat réservée! for
him
at the café
where, being a fervent
and sundry in favor of the Comte de
Chambord, claimant to the throne. Degas persuaded him to
pose with the actress Ellen Andrée on the café terrace for The
Absinthe (1876). Both of them hâve the vague gaze characterroyalist,
he harangued
ail
of addicts of the highly potent absinthe of eighty years
Women at a Café, with
the houses on Place Clichy (or perhaps Boulevard de Clichy)
in the background. Four years later, in 1881, when he was
living at 19 bis. Rue Fontaine, he modeled in wax the famous
Fourteen-year-old Damer (also known as La Grande Danseuse) of
which Renoir wrote: "What superb line she has, this young
istic
ago. Next year Degas painted his pastel,
—
wax and that mouth, just hinted at, how beautidone!" Degas, who was a friend of Mallarmé at the
time and an occasional versifier, composed a sonnet in her
honor which includes thèse lines:
ballet girl in
fully
it's
Si Montmartre a donné
Roxelane
le neî^ et
la
Attentif Ariel donne à
Tes pas légers de jour,
V esprit
Chine
les
et les
aïeux
jeux,
cette recrue
tes
pas
légers de nuit.
Montmartre supplied "the spirit and the lineage" of this
dancer, it was also in Montmartre that Degas found
models for the ballerinas who figure so often in his painting.
Actually the painters who were now known as Impressionists
seldom visited the Nouvelle-Athènes, with the exception of
Renoir, who often made his way up the steep road leading from
his studio in Rue Saint-Georges to Place Pigalle. He walked in
with his usual brisk step and absent-minded air, plumped
himself down in a corner and rarely joined in the gênerai
conversation. He was always twiddling a cigarette between his
fingers and relighting it, or "doodling on the table with a
burnt match." ^^ Monet and Sisley, who lived outside Paris,
If
little
34
»»i
came and Cézanne, too, was an infrequent
The moment he entered the café, Manet, nothing if not
inquisitive, made room for him at his side and started plying
him with questions about his work questions which the
astute southerner always turned with some tall story made up
on the spur of the moment. George Moore who, after giving
up the idea of being a painter, had broken with Cabanel, was
practically never
visiter.
—
EDOUARD MANET. PORTRAIT OF GEORGE MOORE,
CA. 1879.
35
whose atmosphère he has so
young school of
a habitué of this
famous
well evoked in
writings and in which the
artists
found
About
liis
its earliest
café
defenders.
Renoir was finishing his portrait of
Madame Charpentier, wife of the famous Parisian publisher.
No sooner had he given the finishing touch to the eyelashes of
that haughty patrician lady than he moved to Rue Cortot to
this
time
work on
a big canvas. Already, while in Rue Saint-Georges,
he had been working on a sketch of the open-air dancing at the
Moulin de la Galette, which he often visited with Lamy and
Goeneutte, and where he could count on meeting other friends,
amongst them Gervex. There he found models who had the
advantage over professionals of striking perfectly natural poses.
AU the women he painted from 1875 on were young persons
he met at the Moulin: milliners, dressmakers and florists
who had come there to dance. Some demurred at the idea of
being "exhibited" or figuring in a picture-dealer's window, but
Renoir always managed to talk them round. It was hard to say
No to this keen-eyed young gentleman who listened so amiably
to their chatter, escorted them to their mothers' homes, brought
présents to the children, then so politely requested them to
pose en corsage.
Renoir's art is, in fact, imbued with the atmosphère of
Montmartre in that golden âge when its charm had not yet
been commercialized. And what fascinated him in this little
world apart, perched on a humble hill, was not so much the
night life as those sunny afternoons when sunbeams played on
the blonde beauty of The Swing and flickered through the
leafage of the trees around the Moulin.
But it was only at the instance of Franc Lamy that he
came to paint that masterwork, L.e Moulin de la Galette. One
day,
when
visiting Renoir's studio,
and promptly urged
36
his
Lamy
noticed the sketch
friend to expand
it
into a full-size
The fîrst thing, Renoir decided, was to rent a room
somewhere near the Moulin where he could house his big
canvas after the day's work and, on occasion, he could sleep.
Georges Rivière has given an entertaining account of this house-
painting.
hunting expédition.
"One morning in May 1876 Renoir and I started out from
Rue Saint-Georges to try to unearth the sort of place he had
in mind. We explored quite a number of Montmartre streets,
climbed a séries of more or less squalid staircases, peeked into
some uninviting hovels and mouldering sheds in dingy backyards, without finding anything of the kind he wanted.
"Then,
as
chance would hâve
it,
we
turned into Rue Cortot,
narrow street flanked by crumbHng walls and
old-world cottages. There was no sidewalk and such drainage
as there was consisted of a gutter in the middle of the street.
By this time we were getting tired, our quest seemed pretty
hopeless and we gave no more than casual glances at the house
fronts. Then, unexpectedly, on a narrow door adorned with
mouldings and scroll-work in i8th-century style, we saw a
notice: Furnished Apartment to Let. One of the oldest in the
street, this cottage looked as if it once had acted as the
servants' quarters of some big private mansion that had long
since disappeared. No sooner had Renoir crossed the threshold
than he went into raptures over the garden which could be
seen at the end of a long passage running through the house.
There was a huge, untended lawn spangled with daisies and
wild poppies. Beyond lay a tree-lined garden path and behind
in those days a
it
an orchard.
"The caretaker, an old lady, gave us an amiable welcome.
The apartment she showed us, located on the second floor
immediately below the roof, contained two fairly large rooms,
and the furniture, if scanty, was enough for a man with simple
tastes like Renoir.
37
n
(i
EDGAR DEGAS. WOMEN
IN A CAFÉ AT
MONTMARTRE
(dETAIl), 1877.
This fine pastel which formed part of the Caillebotte bequest is now in the
Louvre (Cabinet des Dessins). The color was laid in on a monotype of
which only one copy was pulled a technique in which Degas excelled.
The scène is a boulevard café in Montmartre. "We see two women seated
at the entrance," wrote Georges Rivière in the first issue (1877) of the
magazine L'Impressionniste, "one of them clicking her thumbnail against
her teeth, as if to say 'He didn't even give me so much as thatV while her
companion has laid her big gloved hand flat on the table in the foreground."
—
38
AUGUSTE RENOIR. THE MOULIN DE LA GALETTE (dETAIL), 1876.
39
AUGUSTE RENOIR. IN A CAFÉ, 1876-1877.
40
EDOUARD MANET. CHEZ LE PÈRE LATHUILE
(dETAIL), 1879.
41
"The Windows gave on
the garden and, crowning amenity,
was a disused stable just behind the house where he could
store canvases and easels. Everything, in short, was to his liking,
the rent was low, and Renoir promptly took the place, moving
there
in next
morning.
"That was, for both of us, the beginning of many happy
days, divided between the cottage and the Moulin where
Renoir worked every afternoon on his big canvas. We used to
carry it between us from his apartment to the Moulin, for ail
the actual painting was done on the spot. Sometimes there
were anxious moments, when a strong wind was blowing and
it looked as if the canvas with its châssis would tear itself from
our hands and shoot up like a kite above the Butte." ^^
Renoir's Montmartre was still in a state of pristine innocence, like a fruit just forming from a flower and as yet
unplucked. True, it was already a rendezvous of aesthetes and
young dressmakers' assistants, but it had not yet declined into
a playground of pretty ladies and questing maies. The Montmartre Renoir knew was a rose that still had its natural hues
despite the nearness of Paris and its artificial grâces; a rose
still diamonded with morning dew. It was a meeting-place
for lovers, an oasis of light reserved for young people who
remained their unsophisticated selves in an atmosphère of
carefree gaiety. And Renoir loved to watch the couples turning
in the mazes of the dance, bathed in the sunlight falling through
the trees around the Moulin, leaning forward to snatch a kiss
or seated at a table sipping some sparkling wine, in a blue haze
of pipe and cigar smoke. No other artist ever celebrated better
than he the joy of living, those fleeting moments of exquisite
sensation when sunlight and the season of the year conspire
to give a feeling of delight; no other artist has understood so
well the careless rapture of those privileged occasions and
recorded them on canvas so memorably.
42
AUGUSTE RENOIR. PLACE CLICHY, CA. 1880.
43
Thus one of the most remarkable achievements of
painting had as
modem
point of dcparture a quite ordinary scène,
the 'P2insi2in jemesse at play in the grounds of the Moulin de la
its
And thus, as so often in Venice, so in Montmartre
was achieved a magie transmutation of reality into art;
indeed the change was even further-going in the latter, for
while the canals of Venice hâve a mystery and dignity of their
own, nothing could seem more unpromising than the rather
Galette.
there
tawdry surroundings of the Butte.
When working on
this huge canvas, Renoir used to hâve
meals at a nearby restaurant, "Chez Olivier," a delightfully
rustic little place. If the weather was fine he sat in one of the
arbors covered with Virginia creeper; if wet, in the small,
meagerly furnished eating-room.
Paris seemed like another world. When, in 1875, Forain had
a studio at the corner of Rue Lepic and Rue Tourlaque, he
spoke of his Windows overlooking "the Montmartre countryside inhabited by painters and rentiers, where you could work in
his
peace, lead a
Bohemian
life
and behave
as fantastically as
you
liked without being in the least conspicuous."
The album of photographs of Montmartre taken in those
happy days which I hâve before me as I write brings out the
charming rusticity and friendliness of the place. Everywhere
are
little
gardens, shacks like rabbit-hutches, small, crazily built
The Impasse Girardon looks
for ail the world like a
But while the Cité Maupy is still a grassy
expanse fringed with cottages, the Rue du Mont-Cenis has
already a somewhat cityfied appearance, and work has begun
on the big Réservoir, just below the spot where the SacréCœur was soon to rise. Moreover, a number of cabarets now
were springing up, successors of the famous dance-halls, the
Boule Noire, the Elysée-Montmartre and the Reine Blanche, and
towards the close of 1881 the Chat Noir opened its doors.
houses.
mountain
44
pass.
"Fm feeling positively lost," wrote Renoir to a friend
during his trip to Italy in 1881, "at being eut off from Montmartre." In his opinion the humble s t ^r/>//^ was quite as attractive as any of the sparkling belles of Naples. By now Montmartre was by way of becoming the Mecca of Parisians on
pleasure bent, and its little streets were thronged with cabs and
carriages at ail hours of the day and night.
AUGUSTE RENOIR. BUILDING IN PROGRESS ON THE SACRÉ-CCTrR,
TA,
T
90O.
45
TRANSIT OF VAN GOGH
WHEN
under
in 1886, tired of studying at the
teachers
who
did
ail
Academy of Antwerp
they could to curb his inde-
spirit, a Dutch painter in his early thirties migrated to
Montmartre (where he had already lived eleven years before ^^),
it was not any interest in the nightlife of the place that led him
there. Vincent van Gogh was essentially serious-minded, his
protestant upbringing had taught him to frown on any sort of
frivolity, and he was never an easy man to get on with. His
brother Théo, who was sales-manager at a branch of the Goupil
Gallery on Boulevard Montmartre and had been sending him
money every month, had advised him to wait till June, when he
hoped to rent a larger apartment but Vincent' s patience had
worn thin. And one morning at the end of February when
Théo was at work in the picture-shop, he received a note
scribbled in black chalk announcing that Vincent was waiting
pendent
—
for his brother in the Salon Carré of the Louvre.
Vincent shared Theo's lodgings in Rue de Laval. They were
too cramped for him to work in, so he took to going to the
"Academy" run by Fernand
who had opened
it
known as Cormon,
Avenue de Clichy and arranged
Piestres, better
a studio at 104
to his liking "with stacks of weapons, embroidery
fabrics cluttering
up
the corners."
On
the walls
and
hung
rich
copies
From Emile Bernard, one of his fellow
we learn that "Van Gogh's bearishness
intrigued us ail. He worked incessantly:
of Old Master pictures.
students at Cormon's,
and self-absorption
morning with the other students, painting from the
model; in the afternoon, when only Toulouse-Lautrec, Anquetin and myself were in the studio, from Cormon's ^antiques'." ^^
After a while Vincent tired of this arrangement and when his
brother moved into new quarters at 54 Rue Lepic, he went to
live with him. There were three fairly big rooms, one small one
in the
46
of closet) and a tiny kitchen, and Vincent had the luxury
of a sofa and a slow-combustion stove to himself. He slept in
the closet, behind which was a room he used as his studio.
From its one and only window he could see the Moulin de la
Galette, Madame Bataille's restaurant, in which he took his
meals, and the landscape, not as yet built over, of the Butte.^^
(a sort
VINCENT VAN GOGH. THE MOULIN DE LA GALETTE,
1
886-1 888.
47
TT
Vincent was initiated into Impressionism. He
of flowers, the view from his studio window
and, under the influence of such open-air painters as Monet,
Sisley and Pissarro, gradually rid his palette of the dark colors
he had hitherto employed. "You'd hardly recognize Vincent,'*
wrote Théo to his mother in the summer of 1886. "He's
At
painted
Paris
still lifes
CAMILLE PISSARRO. THE OUTER BOULEVARDS, 1879.
48
making vast progress as an artist. Also, he's much more cheerand everybody hère likes him." And Théo added that he
was still quite determined to "launch" his brother.
This was none too easy. Once the abrupt change in his life
had ceased to operate, Vincent relapsed into his former mental
instability; his nerves were always on edge and he "struck
ful
VINCENT VAN GOGH. BOULEVARD DE CLICHY,
1
886-1 888.
49
ail his contacts. A rallying-point of the ImpresTheo's picture-shop was patronized by Monet, Sisley,
Pissarro, Degas, Seurat, Raffaelli. But though their canvases
were on view every afternoon from five to seven (with the
exception of those of Degas, who never exhibited), it was
uphill work getting them approved of by the public and cri tics.
Vincent loudly aired his views on art and the nefariousness of
art-dealers, protesting violently against the way the Goupil
Gallery was run, nagging Théo and urging him to break with
his employer and start a new gallery of his own.
Van Gogh' s constant présence had a bad effect on attendances at the gallery and, strong as was his sensé of the family
tie, Théo began to hope that his "impossible brother" would
make a move. "There are two men in him," he wrote to his
younger sister. "One is marvelously gifted, gentle and sensitive;
sparks" in
sionists,
the other, selfish and cruel. And the pity is that he's his own
enemy; for it isn't only for other people that he makes life
difficult, he does the same thing to himself."
In spring 1887, with the first fine days, Vincent started
painting in the open air, usually at Asnières where (according
made triptychs of the island of La Grande
showing the little taverns on the Seine bank, the boats
on the river, and the gardens haunted by loving couples on
Sunday afternoons. One wonders if on thèse expéditions he
met Seurat who about this time was making sketches for his
to his sister-in-law) he
Jatte,
A
Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande fatte,
hâve no évidence that any such encounter took place, but
Van Gogh certainly came in contact with Emile Bernard, who
lived there, and whose portrait he made.
In a letter to his brother (summer 1887) he wrote: "I met
Tanguy yesterday and he is exhibiting in his window the canvas
l've just finished." Tanguy, a colorman with a shop in Rue
big canvas
We
Clauzel,
50
was alone
in
showing
interest in
Van Gogh' s
painting.
VINCENT VAN GOGH. MONTMARTRE (LE CAFÉ DU POINT DE VUE),
I
886-1 888.
51
In this same
summer
the painter took to visiting Le Tambourin,
by Corot's former model "La Segatori" and
patronized by Anquetin, Bernard and Lautrec.
a cabaret run
In the winter of 1 887-1 888 he made many portraits, including one of Père Tanguy and several of himself, most striking
showing him standing at his easel (according
is the most lifelike of ail his self-portraits).
But soon he had had enough of Paris. Because of his quickness
to take offense and the demands he made on ail with whom he
came in contact, he never got on well even with the Impressionists, whom on one occasion he referred to as "poor hacks."
Almost the only artist he was friendly with was Guillaumin,
whom he visited at his lodgings on the Quai d'Anjou. Van Gogh
was downright to the point of rudeness and flared up when
anyone disagreed with him. His talks with Gauguin confirmed
him in his opinion that the new school had not said the last
Word on art. In any case he found life in a big city too trying;
he felt he needed to fînd "a quiet place where he could pull
himself together and get ail the rotten wine he had been drinking out of his System." Also the climate was "too grey and
cold." The truth was that Van Gogh always felt rather out of
his élément in Paris. Noisy gatherings at cafés where he was
always being shouted down by strident aestheticians discoursing on the laws of art suited him far less than the peaceful fields
and woodlands of La Crau where the only sound was the
trilling of cicadas. A man of his stamp, religious-minded and
of which
is
the one
to Theo's wife, this
intensely serious, the prey of fixed ideas, allergie to the fashions
of the day and the charms of witty conversation, could feel at
ease only in the vast open spaces and silence of the country.
Whereas Lautrec enjoyed nothing better than listening to the
chatter of slightly drunk filles de joie and young bloods who had
come to sample Montmartre nightlife, ail Van Gogh desired
was to be left in peace to meditate.
52
VINCENT VAN GOGH. LE PÈRE TANGUY, 1887-1888.
53
'X_%
\m^^. -/.
•"-n'HA
VINCENT VAN GOGH. LA GUINGUETTE, CA. 1886.
In February 1888 he left for the South of France, where he
discovered the radiant light which was henceforth to dominate
And now it was with leaves of grass, wheat fîelds, olive
and sunflowers that he began that silent dialogue which
was to last until his mind gave way. Nevertheless the fact
remains that Montmartre was the scène of the first flowering
his art.
trees
54
of
Van Gogh' s
art.
True, the
work turned out
in Paris
had not
the sweep and signifîcance of that of the Arles period; he had
not yet found in painting a means of total self-expression. Yet
the varied colors and minute comma-like touches in his renderings of the Butte and Rue Lepic were a great advance on the
lack-luster compositions of his youth, which reflect the somber
vision of the Ramsgate schoolmaster and the pilgrim of the
absolute who had worked as a lay-preacher in the Belgian "black
country." Paris and Montmartre taught Vincent that painting
could, and should, stand on its own feet; it had no need to be
bolstered up by pious intentions like those of the English artists
of The Pilgrim. He also learnt that the painter's vision is bodied
forth by the physical properties of his médium and by color
arrangements which in themselves sufïice to convey the artist's
émotion to the beholder. During his stay in Paris his palette
brightened up, he used more vivid blues and made his light
more brilliant. Sometimes, too, he employed the divisionist
technique, and in gênerai his exécution became fîrmer, more
adventurous than in the past. The amount of work he turned
out in those two years of arduous effort is amazing nearly two
hundred pictures (according to La Faille' s catalogue). Amongst
:
them
are the Café du Point de Vue, that
homage
to the three
French flag, and La Guinguette,
both presumably painted in Montmartre. According to Yaki,
the latter depicts the garden café known as "Le Franc-Buveur,"
in Rue des Saules. Edmond Heuzé, however, who is an authority
on the Montmartre of those days, says that Van Gogh must
hâve painted this picture at the gâte of the Moulin de la Galette
facing Rue Norvins. But the actual scène depicted matters little;
what gives this picture its unique appeal is the meaningful
gradation of tonal values by which Van Gogh has imparted
to it accents of intense veracity and at the same time of almost
tragic pathos, the artist's sensé of désolation in an alien world.
colors, blue, white
and
red, of the
55
56
LAUTREC'S PERAMBULATIONS
could those two
WHAT
seemingly
fellow students in Cormon's studio,
Van Gogh, hâve
found to say to each other? The former, who had corne from
his hometown, Albi, in the same year as Vincent, felt wonderfully at ease in the streets of Paris, where the crowds were so
dense that he could pass unnoticed. His friends used to say that
he looked taller seated than standing up, and Lautrec, painfully
conscious of his dwarf-like stature, was much relieved to find
so totally unlike, Lautrec and
that his deformity attracted little or no attention on the boulevards and in the Montmartre cabarets. Appearances notwithstanding, the scion of the ancient house of the Counts of
Toulouse and the son of the poor Nuenen pastor discovered
much in common. For one thing, the kind of painting
both indulged in was anathema to the public. And both alike
rebelled against what Emile Bernard called "the footling
school-boy art drummed into us by that half-dead, uninspiring
pédagogue Monsieur Cormon," a specialist in the prehistoric.
y^Lautrec spent a great part of his time in the cabarets and
dance-halls which were then proliferating in Montmartre. As a
resuit of its vast success, the Chat Noir had been transferred
from Boulevard Rochechouart to Rue de Laval (now Rue
Victor-Masse). It was still being run by its original proprietor
Rodolphe Salis, a Swiss hailing from the Canton of the Grisons.
He had given his cabaret a vaguely old-world atmosphère, it was
equipped with Louis XIII chairs, but his speciality was the use
of the latest Parisian argot sprinkled with touches of grandiloquence and braggadocio. "God created the world," he was fond
of saying, "Napoléon instituted the Légion of Honor as for me,
they had
;
DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC. THE TRACE HORSE OF THE BUS LINE,
PLACE CLICHY, 1888.
57
IVe 'made' Montmartre." That was true up to a point, but
actually the "making" of Montmartre was largely due to a young
chansonnier from Courtenay, Aristide Bruant, who had made his
début
at the
later Bruant,
A
Chat Noir with his song
la Villette, Some years
who had become estranged from Salis, opened a
Le Mirliton ^o, in the premises vacated by
the Chat Noir elsewhere. Bruant lived
in an old house thickly surrounded by trees at the junction of
Rue Cortot and Rue des Saules. For sixty-five centimes, the price
cabaret of his own.
Salis,
who had moved
of a glass of béer, Parisians could hâve the perverse joy of being
targets for the ribald wit of this obstreperous young man.
Bruant did not merely make fun of his auditors, on occasion
he was bluntly rude, as when he bade them "shut their damn'
traps!" if they started talking while he sang.
Among the artists who bring home to us the atmosphère and
spirit of Montmartre towards the close of the 1 9th century, this
caustic, rough-tongued singer holds a unique place. No one
has evoked better than he the sights and smells, the little tragédies and comédies of its streets no poet has succeeded better
than Bruant in conjuring up to vivid life a whole district of
Paris in the fîrst verse of a song more amazing still, thèse songs
of his, though phrased in the argot of Montmartre, often hâve
the deep-toned résonance of an anthem.
Lautrec much admired Bruant and signed with an anagram
Saint-La:(are,
of his name ("Treclau") the cover of Bruant's
the song that, sung by Eugénie Buffet, her hands in the pockets
of her tattered skirt, caused such a scandai. Bruant, for his part,
though he preferred Steinlen as an artist, proved his esteem for
Lautrec when he forced the management of the Ambassadors
to display Lautrec's poster,
theater where he was performing
which had been turned down by them originally.
;
;
A
—
—
HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC. POSTER FOR THE MOULIN ROUGE, 189I.
58
Mo.
32
L
59
33
J
HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC. ARISTIDE BRUANT, 1893. POSTER.
60
To
this
period belongs Courteline's description of Bruant,
"One dog, two dogs,
Corduroy pants, a lapeled waistcoat and
a hunting jacket with métal buttons. A red scarf in May, a red
shirt in ail seasons. Under a huge, daredevil hat, a handsome
face, the face of an obdurate but affable Chouan. Passers-by
stop to stare and wonder 'Who the devil is that fellow?' The
answer's simple: he is Montmartre, Montmartre incarnate taking the air on its doorstep. Montmartre alias Aristide Bruant."
Lautrec's perambulation was only beginning. Following in
the footsteps of Degas, his senior by three décades, he chose for
hardly less colorful than Lautrec's poster.
three dogs, top boots.
bathed in the glare of
frequented nightclubs and
fancy-dress balls where his physical shortcomings passed unnoticed. He was so often to be seen sketching at the Moulin de la
his subjects jockeys, music-hall singers
footlights,
women
at their toilet.
He
Galette that Francis Jourdain called
in contradistinction to
its
it
"Moulin de Lautrec,"
Moulin Rouge, "whose
the
successor, the
atmosphère of tawdry luxury was much like that of a bordello." ^^
However Lautrec was also a habitué of the latter, which was
located between nos. 84 and 92 of Boulevard de Clichy on the
former site of the Bal de la Reine Blanche, pulled down in 1885.
At the time when the old Montmartre windmills were disappearing one by one, Zidler, an ex-butcher, had had the lucrative
inspiration of building, in association with the Oller brothers,
this bogus windmill at the foot of the Butte.
The opening of the Moulin Rouge on October 6, 1889, was
one of the great Parisian "events" of that pleasure-loving epoch.
It was heralded by a poster, a little masterpiece, made by Chéret,
which showed "the vendeuses d* amour pretty ladies and sportive
priestesses of Venus mounted on donkeys capering in gay procession to our new shrine of love." 22 ^^d ail the élite of Paris
flocked to the big new dance hall lit by flaring gas-jets, where
the floorshow came up to the highest expectations.
^
61
62
HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC. AT THE MOULIN ROUGE, DETAIL: DR GABRIEL
TAPIE DE CÉLEYRAN, HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC, PAUL SESCAU, 1892.
I
THE MOULIN ROUGE, DETAIL! VALENTIN LE DESOSSE,
189O.
63
A
Renaudin who kept a bar in Rue Coquildanced there under the name of Valentin le Désossé
(an allusion to his "rubber-legged" contortions), his opposite
number being La Goulue. Other floor dancers bore such
picturesque names as La Môme Fromage, Grille d'Egout and
lière
certain Jacques
2^,
Rayon d'Or.
When
his entry
by OfFenbach, Lautrec made
with a group of friends, attended by an escort of
to the strains of a tune
and lusty pugilists who cleared the way for him and
him from the crowd, he always created a sensation.
"People stared in amazement at this queer, topheavy little man,
swaying on his stunted legs like a ship at sea, with an enormous
head, black, bushy beard and thick lips, eyes twinkling ironically
behind the pince-nez straddling an enormous nose. He often
wore check trousers, a flat-brimmed derby and, in winter, a
blue frieze overcoat and a green muffler loosely knotted round
his neck with the ends flapping on his chest." ^^
When in 1892 Zidler handed over the Moulin Rouge to one
of the Oller brothers, Lautrec was somewhat anxious about the
fate of his two big pictures hung in the lounge above the bar
over which presided a wench of ample charms named Sarah.
This was the time when La Goulue, whom Lautrec had known
for five years (he had been présent at her fîrst appearance at the
Elysée-Montmartre), was at the height of her famé and attracted
crowds to see her dancing at the Moulin. "Her legs shoot up
into the air, imperil the bystanders' hats, and reveal suggestively
but winsomely a mass of flimsy undies," wrote a contemporary
observer in the magazine Gil Blas.
Two of Lautrec' s English cronies, the artist Charles Conder
and the poet Arthur Symons, typical personalities of the Yellow
Book era, were fascinated by the "French Can-Can." There was
always a crowd of Americans and Englishmen, the latter wearing
knickerbockers and smoking bulldog pipes, rubbing shoulders
painters
shielded
64
with French dandies in evening dress and opera-hats, to watch
La Goulue and the acrobaties of the well-trained dancers of the
famous Moulin Rouge quadrille. Amongst the latter was La Tige,
most strenuous of high-kickers, whom Lautrec has immortalized
in a lithograph. To make their names known to newcomers to
the dance-hall, the performers of the quadrille had hit on the
ingenious device of painting their names on the soles of their
shoes, so as to be well in view when they did their high kicks.
From 1891 on, when he was commissioned by the management to make a new poster replacing Chéret's, the Moulin Rouge
was an unfailing source of inspiration to Lautrec, whose output
of paintings, drawings and lithographs on this thème was
nothing short of prodigious. The atmosphère now was vastly
différent from that of Renoir' s Moulin, with its sunlit trees
and open-air dancing. Lautrec's Montmartre is faintly sinister;
under the yellow gas-jets of the Moulin Rouge the air seems
vitiated, redolent of strange drugs and perfumes, and the
top-hatted gentlemen above whose heads the can-can dancers
swing their silk-clad ankles seem more bored than elated.
Lautrec was the poet and the painter of this curious half-world.
He felt thoroughly at home with the "staff"
of the establishment,
freedom of thought and language delighted him, and it
was as a boon companion of La Goulue and the rest that he
greeted his aristocratie friends from the provinces and the cosmopolitan élite of Paris who nightly thronged the Moulin Rouge.
their
What strikes us fîrst in Lautrec's renderings of thèse people,
performers and spectators, is the magnifîeent draftsmanship, the
erisp, clean line, harsh to the point of eruelty, whieh makes
them live before us. But as a painter, too, he claims our admiration for the vigor of his brushwork, the originality of his color
schemes, and his dextrous use of flat tints in the Japanese manner. True, Lautrec was a man of his âge, but without a trace
of mannerism; his work is of the class that never "dates."
65
Many
of the large compositions inspired by the Moulin
Rouge were painted on cardboard supports and
was
since the color
absorbed by the cardboard, the painting has a
curious fluidity, giving the effect of movement at its most volatile. Hatchings, dottings, comma-like brushstrokes are sprinkled
on the surface, which has the matness of a fresco. Often Lautrec
leaves open, unpainted spaces in the composition, letting the
natural hue of the cardboard set the basic tone. Ail thèse works
hâve a caustic brevity of statement and a nicety of handling,
seen to perfection in his small panel Jane Avril Dancing.
Daughter of an Italian nobleman and a demi-mondaine, this
famous cabaret dancer scored a prompt success when in 1892,
at the âge of twenty-four, under the name of La Mélinite, she
took the floor for the first time at the Moulin Rouge. Her
élégant refinement made an admirable foil to the unabashed
vulgarity of La Goulue, and Lautrec was much taken by her.
She was seen at her best alone, when, surrounded by a circle
of admirers, she performed a séries of whirlwind spins, "like
a star of the skating rink executing figures-of-eight." ^^ Poets
wrote lyrics in her honor and her exquisite dresses were the
envy of Parisiennes. In London Nights Arthur Symons speaks
of her "morbid, vague, ambiguous" charm and describes her as
"the shadow of a smile behind the shadow of the night," dancing
as the fancy took her. Her fancy took her, also, to Lautrec's
studio to sit for him; she genuinely liked the smell of oil and
turpentine that always hovers in the air of an atelier.
Lautrec often went to the Fernando circus, and it was there
he saw the circus-rider who inspired him to paint his first
large-scale work (now in the Art Institute of Chicago). In 1893
he painted the clown Medrano (known as "Boum-Boum") who
subsequently became so famous that the circus in Boulevard
Rochechouart was given his name. It was there, too, that Seurat
made studies for his (unfinished) picture, The Circus.^^
partially
:
66
HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC. A CORNER IN THE MOULIN
DE LA GALETTE, 1892.
67
LAUTREC.
68
THE CLOWN BOUM-BOUM AT THE CIRQUE FERNANDO,
1893,
—
Lautrec thoroughly
Balls, masquerades and café-concerts
enjoyed the hectic life of Montmartre in the 'nineties. After 1895
he went less often to the Moulin Rouge, hitherto his favorite
hunting-ground, and frequented other music-halls and cabarets.
One was Le Hanneton, a brasserie with a spécial attraction
for women, run by a certain Madame Armande; another was
Les Décadents (16 bis Rue Fontaine) where he was much struck
by an Irish singer, May Belfort, who wore little-girl frocks and,
while performing, always held a black cat in her arms. Her
costumes, ail in one color, lent themselves admirably to the
flat tints Lautrec then was using in his paintings.
Next came the Yvette Guilbert séries. With her first appearance at the Chat Noir the clever young singer from Nice had
made an immédiate hit, and by 1891 she was the talk of the
town. Audiences clamored for Xanrof 's Le Fiacre and, of the
songs she herself composed, Les Demi-Vierges. In her tightfitting dress, she eut a striking figure. Lautrec's sketches bear
out the description of her given by René Maizeroy, one of her
earliest admirers.^^
mocking eyes of
"A
pale,
strange, unforgettable face, the
a Paris street-urchin, a long tapering neck.
A mop
of yellow hair built up like a clown's wig." She was the
tells us, to wear black gloves; until now caféconcert singers had always worn white ones. Such was the young
first,
Xanrof
woman who
nightly brought the house
down
at the
Divan
Japonais launched by Jehan Sarrazin, poet and vendor of olives
(a bucket of which he always carried about with him), who gave
Yvette her chance of trying out her new repertory. It included
Maurice Donnay's monologue Eros Vanné, whose cover was
designed by Lautrec. He made numerous drawings and litho-
and from every
though she was to being
caricatured, Yvette Guilbert was sometimes frankly outraged.
"You little monster! YouVe made me look a horror!" she wrote
graphs of
this witty artist, in various attitudes
angle, so brutally candid that, used
69
to him after seeing his sketch of her, emphasizing her long nose
and grotesquely pursed lips as she stood before the footlights.
Meanwhile where was Lautrec living ? In the heart of Mont-
martre, needless to say, always within a stone's throw, or little
more, of the Moulin Rouge. After staying with his friend
Grenier, he went to live with Dr Bourges at 21 Rue Fontaine,
in the house where Degas had lived before migrating to Rue
Pigalle. When, on the doctor's marriage, he had to quit, he
shared rooms with Rachou, a painter from Toulouse, at 22 Rue
Ganneron. Next, he took to working in the gardens owned by
"Père Forest," where the Montmartre archery club held their
meetings; hère he had his models pose for him under the sycomore and lime trees behind a timber-merchant's dépôt. In funds
again, thanks to a remittance from his family, he rented a large
studio in Rue Caulaincourt (at the Rue Tourlaque corner), where
his witty parody of Puvis de Chavanne's Sacred Wood was given
pride of place. The room was always cluttered up with piles
of cartoons, sofa cushions, dancers' shoes, Japanese prints and
women's hats. Finally he moved to 5 Avenue Frochot where
on May 15, 1897, he gave a house- warming party. Some days
later there appeared a news item in La Vie Parisienne "On the
pretext of showing them his latest pictures and drawings one
of our younger artists invited his friends to hâve a cup of milk (!)
in his new studio." On the invitation card was a drawing by
Lautrec showing him starting to milk a cow; not the same cow,
however, as that which gave its name to the "Vachalcade"
bovinization of "cavalcade" organized that year^s by Montmartre artists, the vache in this case being an allusion to the
phrase manger de la vache enragée^ that is to say "having a lean time
of it" so many an artist's fate. Among the tableaux vivants
presented was The Crowning of the Muse ^^ by Gustave Charpentier, a foretaste of the delightfully romantic opéra whose second
act contains a little symphony of Montmartre street-cries.
:
—
—
70
—
^ili>' V^^-^4- V^Kf^^^
^'
v-'^
-m^^-'^mmx.-:--
GEORGES SEURAT. SKETCH FOR **THE CIRCUS,
71
ivr
c-^A
PIERRE BONNARD. SKETCH OF A POSTER FOR THE MOULIN ROUGE, CA. 1892.
72
BONNARD
AND THE REVUE BLANCHE
WHiLE
ARTISTS
Lautrec's Aristide Bruant in his Cabaret
was being
printed off at the Imprimerie Ancourt, an announcement
U
Escarmouche
of the poster was published in the magazine
31, 1893). The cover of this issue was designed by
Félix Vallotton and it contained, among other reproductions,
one of Bonnard's Cuirassier. Thèse two young men, Vallotton
and Bonnard, belonged to the group of artists (which included
Vuillard, Roussel and Maurice Denis) who were closely associated with that famous periodical the Revue Blanche. Fénéon, its
secretary gênerai, who had been a close friend of Seurat, was
one of the most enlightened art critics of the day, and the
magazine was a godsend to the younger génération artists.
In the same year, 1893, Bonnard, who had begun by having
(December
;
Rue Le Chapelais (in the Batignolles district), moved
Rue de Douai. Later, in 191 3, he rented a studio in Rue Tourlaque, and round about 1925 he took rooms in Boulevard des
Batignolles. It was there, on the third floor of No. 48, at the
a studio in
to
I am writing thèse Unes (but before the house
been
rebuilt),
that I met Bonnard for the first time. There
had
agreeable,
musliny cosiness in the atmosphère of the
was an
room, and the doors were set in tall embrasures made, one would
say, to frame some graceful female nude. Bonnard showed me
his drawings, kept in portfoHos in an ancient chest-of-drawers.
To me he was Idndness itself, though I remember that he had
rather a short way with a picture-dealer who came in while I
was there. This part of Paris, the streets and boulevards around
Place Clichy, always had for him the same attraction as it had
for so many young men of my génération and one could feel its
ambience in many of his canvases. But I also felt that in this
very spot where
;
73
phase of his life, his second flowering, so to speak, he had corne
to observe men without any parti pris and see them exactly like
the figures moving in "his" streets, those of his paintings and
those in which he walked; and that, though for him the latter
had become as trite as an old penny, he had kept the innocent
vision of a child and viewed the world as through a magie
casement. I could not fail to realize that I was disturbing him
at his work, y et he found time to tell me much about his early
days and to describe without a trace of impatience how, though
he had been destined to an officiai career, he had talked his
parents into letting him dévote himself to art.
Thereafter I visited Bonnard several times in his studio,
where he showed me many of his créations (I refrain from using
the Word "productions" as being hardly applicable to pictures
so spontaneous and joyfully inspired). Each brushstroke seemed
vibrant with the artist's inner life as if he had put his whole
being into it; and he had that gift, shared with a few great painters, of giving incidents of city Hfe, the daily activities of humble
folk, a noble timelessness. The human élément in Bonnard's
work is a sort of distillation of the cobbled streets of old Montmartre. That fruit-and-vegetable seller pushing his little barrow,
—
that
woman
gingerly crossing a public square, the
little
dress-
maker's assistant coming down Rue Pigalle or Rue Damrémont,
the newsboy speeding down the boulevard can thèse really
be the same people as those who figure in Steinlen's pictures of
the humbler class? Steinlen, too, has given us (but in blackand-white) a vivid panorama of Montmartre, whose "climate" in
—
his
work
is
one of thorough-paced,
if
good-humored
socialism.
No less thanhis lithographs of cats and down-and-outs à la Rictus^
Steinlen's cartoons of Montmartre working-women, dressmakers' errand-girls, little seamstresses with pert snub-noses,
washerwomen with their hair bunched in huge chignons, are
masterpieces of the genre. He also produced some spirited,
74
PIERRE BONNARD. THE BOULEVARD, CA. I904.
75
HENRI EVENEPOEL. THE SPANIARD IN PARIS (iTURRINO), DETAIL, 1899.
highly effective oil-paintings, one of which (unfortunately
I hâve
showing Edward VII
Grand Duke Nicholas watching the can-can
not been able to trace
and,
I
believe.
it)
was
a Moulin Rouge
work we nearly always fînd a "message,"
something of the anarchistic spirit of the Assiette au Beurre,
There was nothing of that sort in Bonnard's work; it was wholly
conditioned by his artistic sensibility, and if he sides with the
have-nots, he shows no animosity towards the well-to-do. He
dancers. In Steinlen's
depicts
human
means or
76
beings as they essentially are, irrespective of their
social status.
The raw
materials of his personages are,
one might say, the asphalt of the sidewalks, the stone of pavingblocks and even the iron of the bridge whose grated platform
overhangs the tombstones of Montmartre cemetery. Though
thèse people bear indelible marks of sufïering, they always seem
ready to takewing towards that wonderland whichwasBonnard's
spiritual home. He liked humble folk and loathed pretentiousness of any kind. For a long while I took him for a religiousminded man, and in the last analysis perhaps he was one; so
évident was his gratitude to Providence for having granted him
the joy of painting and creating.
There were several artists of the older génération who lived
in Montmartre not far from Bonnard. Degas was at 22 Rue
Pigalle; Seurat's last studio before his death in 1891 was in
the Passage de l'Elysée des Beaux-Arts, and he intended, so
Coquiot tells us ^, to paint Place Clichy with its teeming crowds
as a pendant to his Stinday Afternoon at the Island of La Grande
He worked there on several of his large pictures, notably
The Circus which was left unfkdshed at his death, and to gather
material for which he often visited the Medrano show.
Round about 1895 Renoir lived in the Château des Brouillards, before moving down the hill to Rue La Rochefoucauld,
where one of his neighbors was Bottini, who has evoked so
skillfully the bars and cafés of Rue Fontaine. There was still a
stretch of open country, called the Maquis, between the Moulin
de la Galette and Rue Caulaincourt. It was a favorite haunt
of artists wearing capes, big felt hats and peg-top trousers,
dressed rather like EvenepoeFs Spaniard. Henri Evenepoel ^^
Jatte.
(a Belgian,
who had
studied under Gustave
Moreau and died
made
âge of twenty-seven in 1899, the year in which he
this picture) placed his subject, a typical figure of the
at the
artist
between the Moulin Rouge and the end of Rue Lepic.
The Montmartre of those days, "where ail the street-girls
were ravishingly pretty and heroically poor," ^^ home of the
milieu,
n
"the little milliner who looked like a singing nymph
and wore her flowered hat at a rakish angle," ^^ was much like
the Montmartre of that romantic opéra Louise, a hymn to what
was then known as "free love." You still saw people making
hay in Square Saint-Pierre, "where in the evenings there forgathered ail the 'glamour girls' and their 'protectors', and a hum
of voices wove through the round-dance of the May Aies.
Presently, spangling the warm grass like glow-worms, tiny
specks of red flashed out, as cigarettes were lighted. Then
someone struck up a popular song on an accordion and ail the
girls joined in the chorus." ^ And while Delmet, tenderest of
chansonniers, was setting to music Maurice Boukay's Stances à
Manon, a young man was performing on the piano, to the gênerai
grisette,
hilarity,
his
^''Pièces
shaped like a
PearT The young man
in
question, Erik Satie, had got his start as a hired pianist at the
Chat Noir; then, after quarrelling with Salis, had moved to
the Auberge du Clou in Avenue Trudaine, where a youthful
musician named Claude Debussy was captivated by his novel
harmonies. And, speaking of music, we must not forget Lieds
de Montmartre, words by Courteline and music by Claude
Terrasse, Bonnard's brother-in-law.^^
Such was the atmosphère of the late 'nineties, so congenial
to Bonnard. In painting, as in poetry and music, the new men
were seeking to create vibrations and résonances of a subtler
nature than the fluttering effusions of Impressionism whose
swan-song was then being chanted by Pissarro in his séries of
twelve views of Boulevard Montmartre, in various seasons of
the year and at successive hours of the day. What thèse young
wanted was a more sustained, cohérent résonance, like
Always to retain the freshness of
the sketch this was the aim of such men as Debussy, Bonnard
and Alfred Jarry ^^, who following in the footsteps of Verlaine,
artists
that of a held chord in music.
—
sought to render in the language of the day, with the
78
minimum
of "éloquence," the very essence of sensation. And in Montmartre as elsewhere, perhaps more so than elsewhere, there was
a revolt against intellectualism.
Ail the Revue Blanche painters (and most conspicuously
Bonnard) were intimistes ; far less concerned than their precursor
Lautrec with the idea of "making a picture," they specialized in
PIERRE BONNARD. BOULEVARD DE CLICHY BY NIGHT, CA. I907.
79
of the little incidents that take place in the
privacy of the home. Degas had pointed the way but with a
misogyny that the younger men did not sharc to Bonnard^s
pictures of women "taking a tub" (later, in full-sized baths), or
dressing in curtained bedrooms lit by the fîrst rays of the morinteriors, glimpses
—
—
ning Sun. Vuillard's delicately wrought scènes of children and
breakfast-tables laid with tablecloths in stripes of blue
and red,
were painted in a house in Square Vintimille (now Place Adolphe
Max) where he was living with his mother; notable in thèse
pictures is the way he modulâtes Lautrec's flat tints, giving
them
a
new
vibrancy. Vallotton, a less sensitive
artist,
confined
himself to scènes of lamplit evenings, card-players, people in
evening-dress. Another
member of
the group, Maurice Denis,
showed leanings towards Symbolism
in his painting,
and
also
aired his views in print.
As time went on and Bonnard's
talent ripened, he cast the
of the Revue Blanche group into the shade though
nothing in fact was further from his intention. "You exaggerate
my importance," he told me many years later. "Fm a painter
in the same class as Vallotton and Roussel. As for Vuillard,
I think you're unjust towards him; he is a great decorator." In
speaking thus (in connection with a book I then was writing on
him), Bonnard failed to take into account how far he had outdistanced them since those early days. He forgot that Vuillard'
art had come to a dead end in 1905, when, compromising with
other
artists
the taste of the day, he
how
became
—
a fashionable portrait-painter;
Denis had lapsed into didacticism and décorative
panel painting, and Vallotton into a dry, disillusioned realism.
He, Bonnard, was the only member of the group who had
advanced from strength to strength; he was the painter par
excellence of Place Clichy and Boulevard Montmartre, and his
picture of the Moulin Rouge seen from the café facing it on the
far side of the square,^^ is, in the full sensé of that over-worked
he forgot
80
PIERRE BONNARD. BOULEVARD DES BATIGNOLLES, I907.
This canvas passed directly from Bonnard's hands into the possession of
the Bernheim-Jeune Gallery. The scène is one on which Bonnard must hâve
often gazed from his window at No. 48 a little flower-girl hurrying home
after selling out her stock, schoolboys scampering across the boulevard,
and in the background the Sacré-Cœur. The taxi had not yet supplanted
the fiacre and there was still that atmosphère of **Les BatignoUes'* of
long ago which so enchanted Bonnard. On the right is the open space
dotted with trees where a fiendishly noisy fair takes place twice a year.
An eminently joyous picture, fine flower of this delightful artist's palette.
:
81
term, définitive.
It is
the scène that Pierre
Mac Orlan
has con-
memories of his young days. "At the end
of a dark street was it Rue Blanche? y ou saw the Moulin
Rouge looming hugely, the vast wings slowly turning. And you
felt yourself caught up in that mechanical gyration, which set
the rhythm of the nightworld peopled by Lautrec's floor-dancers
jurée!
up so well
in his
—
—
EDOUARD VUILLARD. PLACE CLICHY,
82
CA.
I9IO.
PIERRE BONNARD. PLACE CLICHY, I912.
and the street-walkers of the
outer
now
half-empty boulevards
—the
as they were called by Parisians." The
in ail directions, the bistros, the butter-eggs-
boulevards,
women moving
and-cheese shops with the inévitable cat dozing on a pile of
gingerbreads in the window, the ragpickers from Saint-Ouen
coming down the boulevard
at
dawn
in their donkey-carts, the
on piles of rags
and scrap-iron ail thèse familiar scènes of the Montmartre
streets Bonnard painted with a vivacity of Une, an exactitude
drivers with their hordes of children squatting
—
83
PIERRE BONNARD. RUE THOLOZE, MONTMARTRE, I9I7.
84
in the rendering of facial expressions, a lifelike
directness that to
cabaret
and forcible
my mind are incomparable. The music-hall and
shows so dear to Lautrec meant nothing to Bonnard.
He was
interested in the surging tide of people in Place Clichy
speeding on their ways, framed by the dark forms of the two
waiters of the Café Wepler, posted like guardian sphinxes at the
entrance. With this maelstrom of richly diversifîed humanity,
engulfing as it were the houses, streets, the horse-cabs, the fîrst
motor-car, the sidewalks, Bonnard has composed a deeply
moving
And
picture
whose
textural richness
hardly less remarkable
is
is
a feast for the eyes.
the nightpiece formerly in the
Maurice Denis Collection.
At first sight Bonnard's work may perhaps strike us as
casual, loosely organized. Yet, when we look into it closely,
we find that there is far less improvisation than might be
supposed in thèse évocations of Montmartre. Still, he had no
illusions about his limitations. One day when I was congratulating him on the sensitivity of his touch and the wonderful
truth to life of his drawing, freer perhaps than any since that of
Corot, he began talking about the Cubists who had made their
start shortly after him, a little higher up the Hill. "Don't imagine," he said to me, "that I underrate them. On the contrary,
I sometimes suspect that there's a touch of 'sloppiness' in my
painting. Still, I couldn't help being what I was, and that
dovetailed pictorial architecture of theirs,
definitely
not for me."
however
fine,
was
THE BATEAU-LAVOIR
AND IMPASSE DE GUELMA
September 1900 a nineteen-year-old young man from
Pablo Ruiz Blasco he was later to adopt his
mother's maiden name, Picasso came to Paris for the first time,
to study art. He began by camping out at 49 Rue Gabrielle with
a Spanish painter, Casagemas, in a studio formerly occupied by
Nonell, his compatriot. It was hère he made the acquaintance of
several Catalan artists who had already found their way to Paris,
one of them being Ramon Casas, a painter of scènes of Montmartre life. Meanwhile he visited picture-dealers, trying to
interest them in his work, and succeeded in selling three sketches
to Berthe Weill. In her gallery he met Manyac
yet another
Catalan who oifered to pay him a hundred and fîfty francs a
INMalaga,
—
—
—
—
month
in return for his entire output.
Picasso had already
shown such
facility
and so remarkable
him "the
(Maurice Utrillo's
a gift of assimilation that his friends at Paris called
little
Goya." Miguel
Utrillo, the art critic
adoptive father), who did so much to promote the return to
favor of El Greco, has described the Picasso of those early days
as "a young man with the small keen eyes of a typical Southerner,
very self-controlled and self-assured, who paraded Montmartre
wearing fancy scarfs with ultra-impressionist designs."
Ail went well until Picasso' s studio companion had an
unlucky love-affair, took to drink, stopped painting and talked
of committing suicide. Picasso had his hands full looking after
Casagemas, though he found time to visit the Louvre and the
Luxembourg, look in at the Moulin Rouge and "take the air"
of Montmartre. Finally he saw nothing for it but to shepherd
his friend back to Catalonia. ^ Unfortunately the lure of Paris
was too strong; Casagemas returned and killed himself.
86
PABLO PICASSO. THE MOULIN DE LA GALETTE, I9OO.
In the autumn of the year he was in Paris Picasso had donc
manner of Forain,
a pastel, The Moulin de la Galette^ rather in the
and a somewhat stylized Can-Can showing the joint influences
of Steinlen and Lautrec whose héritage he seemed disposed to
take over at this time.
During
his
visit to Paris in 1901 Picasso worked
from the vague Impressionism, with small
second
in a style ranging
87
PABLO PICASSO. BAL TABARIN, I9OI.
comma-like brushstrokes,
common
in those days to such very
Marquet and Dufy, to the
of his Bal Tabarin, with
standing on the left against the
différent painters as Pissarro, Luce,
more developed and assured
style
the close-up of the woman
undulating forms of the dancers behind her.
When he was living in Manyac's studio at 150 ter Boulevard
de Clichy, Picasso worked incessantly, stimulated by the prospect
of an exhibition of his work, along with that of the Basque
painter Iturrino, at Vollard's gallery, 6
Rue
Lafïitte.
At
this
which opened on June 24, 1901, he showed seventy^Yt pictures. There he met Max Jacob and the two young men
became firm friends. Manyac's studio it figures in The Blue Room
(in which we see nailed to the wall Lautrec's "May Milton"
poster)
contained two rooms. "The smaller was Manyac's
bedroom, the larger Picasso's. The first thing you saw on entering was the big picture of The Burial of Casagemas which stood
at a little distance from the back wall, like a screen put there
exhibition,
—
—
to conceal something better left unseen."^^
Picasso was entering on his Blue Period. Outstanding
amongst the many pictures he turned out in the next four or five
months was the portrait of the art critic Gustave Coquiot. Next
he began the portrait of Jaime Sabartès, The Bock, now in the
Muséum of Modem Western Art in Moscow. Max Jacob often
dropped in after the day's work was done and read his poems
to a group of friends huddled around the sadly ineffectual studio
stove in a blue haze of pipe-smoke.
"One night we went
to the Chat Noir
— out of pure curiosity,
was by now a back number. Sometimes when
managed to get tickets we dropped in at the Moulin
Rouge to see the quadrille; then moved on to the Zut in Place
Ravignan." ^^ The owner of the cabaret rejoicing in this odd
name was Frédéric Gérard (known to intimâtes as Frédé). After
placing some glasses of béer on a barrel under a lamp, whose
for this cabaret
Picasso had
89
shade was thickly hung with spiders webs, he would start
singing ha femme du roulier (The Carter' s Wife), accompanying
himself on the guitar slung over his shoulder. There was always
a huddle of young artists, sculptors, poets and chansonniers
accompanied by their girl friends, and what with the heat and
overcrowding nerves were frayed and sometimes the evening
ended with a rough house in which knives were freely used.
It was decided that the whitewashed walls of the Zut should
be decorated, and Picasso agreed to lend a hand. "Corne with me
if y ou feel like it," he said to Sabartès. There were two wall
surfaces available and Picasso chose the smaller, leaving the
other to Ramon Pichot. "With the tip of his brush he drew some
female nudes in blue, in a single stroke. Then a hermit in a space
he had left empty for that purpose." Finally, beside the nudes he
brushed in a portrait of Sabartès, "larger than life, in the posture
of an orator." ^^ The Zut no longer exists and Picasso's murais
hâve, alas, shared its fate.
After a second exhibition (thirty pictures and pastels) at
Berthe Weill's gallery in Rue Victor-Masse, Picasso left for
Barcelona. He returned to Paris with Junyer in October 1902.
During the winter he was always moving from one lodging to
another. Did he do moonlight flittings from his furnished rooms
in Rue de Seine and Rue Champollion before coming to share
his friend Max Jacob's "diggings" in Boulevard Voltaire?
There is no proof of this but, if we are to believe a letter written
at this time, he was reduced to burning sheets of drawings to
warm himself in an
hôtel room he was temporarily occupying.^^
In 1904 Picasso migrated from Spain to Paris for the fourth
time, this time for good. He established himself at 1 3 Rue Ravignan (now Place Emile-Goudeau) in that curious hive of studios
known as the "Bateau-Lavoir," where he took over the studio
of his friend Paco Durrio, sculptor and ceramist. You entered
the Bateau-Lavoir by a décrépit double door and the lay-out
90
PABLO PICASSO. THE BLUE ROOM, I90I.
of the rooms was always somewhat baffling to newcomers.
One of the reasons was that this ramshackle plank tenement
(rather like one of those boat wash-houses on the Seine to
which it owed its name) was built on a steep slope, with the
resuit that the ground-floor rooms abutting on the square
became top-floor rooms on the side facing the yard that gave
91
on Rue Garreau.
some way down a
"Picasso's
passage,
was on the lowest
*den'
on the
door wide open and people
left his
him painting away,
One
very hot days he
passed by could see
^^
of the tenants, Fernande Olivier, a buxom, warm-
hearted young
He had
who
practically naked."
floor
On
left.
woman, met him coming
a drenched kitten in his
she should accept
socially," she said
it
in one stormy night.
arms and laughingly suggested
as a présent.
many
years later.
"You couldn't place him
"He walked about the Hill
dressed like a workman, in canvas shoes, with a shabby old
cap on his head or else with his hair blowing about in the wind.
But al way s one was conscious of the 'sacred fire' that burnt
power that I simply
Very soon "La Belle Fernande" took to
haunting the studio where the man from Malaga entertained a
steady stream of Spaniards ail day long (he did his painting by
night so as not to be disturbed). "A mattress on four legs in a
within, and he had a sort of magnetic
couldn't resist."
corner; a small, rusty cast-iron stove with a yellow earthen-
ware basin on
it and a towel, a scrap of soap on a deal table
In another corner a tiny décrépit trunk painted in
black provided an uneasy seat for the caller. A cane chair,
several easels, canvases of ail sizes, tubes of paint littering the
floor. No curtains. In the table drawer lived a pet white mouse
which Picasso looked after with loving care and showed to ail
his visitors." *^ On red-letter days hashish was eaten or opium
smoked. "Sitting on mats, the little group of friends passed
heavenly hours." ^
beside
it.
Soon after Picasso settled in the Bateau-Lavoir, "a blueblooded little Spaniard with jet-black eyes, a near-black face
and coal-black hair" ^ moved into a small, uncomfortable
studio on the left of the entrance. His name was José Gonzalès
(soon changed to "Juan Gris"). Almost penniless, he slept on a
truckle bed with a stove-in mattress. "In spring and summer
92
he opened the two Windows overlooking the Square and settled
down to work at one of them." *^ Gris lived there with Max
Jacob who, at nightfall, primed with ether and wearing a
monocle, would slip out like a ghost from the squalid room and
go down the Hill to recite his poems to some wealthy friend.
Long after, when I got to know Max, he used to speak to me
with an évident nostalgia of those lean years of his youth.
"I still can enjoy the silence of Rue Ravignan, broken only
by the shouts of children at play. Six or eight trees on a sort
of pedestal, and flights of steps flanked by shabby pubs. The
Street broadens out into a square. The houses aren't hovels,
not by a long shot! They're eight-storey buildings dating to
the reign of Napoléon III; mornings, you see mattresses, and
at ail hours sheets, hanging from the Windows. When Picasso
peered down the narrow opening of Rue Berthe, he used to
murmur 'Napoli!'"*^ For the paintings he made in this period
he used ordinary kérosène, taken from the studio lamps, as his
médium not unappropriately, perhaps, considering that it was
from the life of the common people he saw around him that he
drew his inspiration. He seems to hâve been particularly struck
by the freedom with which the loving couples behaved, not
troubling in the least about the présence of onlookers, and the
way in which, locked in an embrace and silhouetted against
the back-cloth of houses high and low, they seemed to form
—
monumental figure.
Manolo was the only constant fréquenter of Picasso's shedlike studio. "The ceiling was supported by tremendously thick
a single, grandly
too big to be real."^^ " Often, when we couldn't
raise the price (thirty centimes) of a glass of béer across the
way, we acted playlets of our own invention in crazy costumes,
under an oil-lamp with a tin shade, hung from the cobwebbed
rafters. One was *The Burial of Sarah Bernhardt' (then very
much alive), another *The Prompter and the Prima Donna'
beams,
much
93
JUAN
94
GRIS. STILL LIFE
AXD LANDSCAPE (PLACE RAVIGNAX),
I915.
AMEDEO MODIGLIANI. PORTRAIT OF MAX JACOB, I916-I917.
95
a tragedy of sorts. Picasso always took part in them, laughing
There was a sinister clanking as a watchdog with the
Germanie name of Frika trailed its ehain beside the ramshackle
wooden walls, preventing the unfortunates in the rooms below
from sleeping. One of them, a poor devil always in dirty clothes,
half tramp, half vegetable-hawker, was too timid to protest,
but a laundress was always grumbling about us to the concierge.
heartily.
This concierge, an old-young woman with a bent back, shrewd,
sharp-tongued and cheerful, had taken a great liking to us
which was just as well!" ^^ Max Jacob was the life and soûl of
the group, and his rendering of the ballad Lena Calvé de Kerguidu
was a triumph of the mock-sentimental.
Picasso had introduced him to Guillaume Apollinaire in the
Austin Fox bar (near Saint-Lazare) which was always full of
"little old English jockeys." "Guillaume was a fine figure of a
man. His suits were eut in English cloth and he sported a
platinum watch-chain. His shirts, however, would hâve been the
better for a wash. His chin was wider than his forehead, above
which rose a tuft of slightly curly, almost golden hair." In
those days Guillaume saw much of "a young girl, at once naïve
and quaintly sophisticated, who was studying in an art school
in Boulevard de Clichy. She lived with her mother in a flat in
Boulevard de la Chapelle, and her name was Marie Laurencin."
Max Jacob has told us how the "new school" was launched
one night when he was dining with Apollinaire, Salmon and
Picasso in Matisse's rooms on Quai Saint-Michel. Matisse took
a small black wooden figurine from a shelf and showed it to
Picasso, who kept fondling it ail evening long. It was his first
contact with negro sculpture. Next day, when Max came to
Picasso's studio, he found the floor strewn with sheets of
drawing paper. "On each sheet was a big drawing, almost the
same: a woman's face with only one eye, a long nose joining
up with the mouth, a lock of hair dangling on her shoulder.
96
GEORGES BRAQUE. THE SACRÉ-CŒUR, I9IO.
97
She reappeared on Picasso's canvases; only instead of one
there were two or three. Then came Les Demoiselles
woman
d^ Avignon
a picture eight feet high."
^^,
Cubism
as
we know
it today was the resuit of many tenand sudden inspirations. It is difficult to say
to open painters' eyes to the "new dimension,"
tative experiments
who was
the
first
LOUIS MARCOUSSIS. THE SACRÉ-CŒUR, I9IO.
98
but there is no question that Princet played a large part in it.
"This young man was always bursting with ideas that he cast
upon the wind, talking incessantly and never caring what fruit
might corne of thèse stray seeds of thought." ^^
In 1905 -1906 the pioneers of the new, poetic vision of the
world were a mathematician (Princet), an aesthetician (Maurice
Raynal), a poet (Apollinaire) and a painter (Picasso). They
usually confabulated in the Bateau-Lavoir, but sometimes in a
little café on the other side of the Square, "A TAmi Emile,"
whose small bar-parlor was to be adorned some years later with
two panels by Modigliani, the larger one being decorated by
Marcoussis.
Two years later (1908) Braque came in touch with Picasso.
At the Salon d'Automne of that year Matisse used the words
"little cubes" with référence to Braque's Houses at UEstaque
(Rupf Collection, Berne). The phrase caught on and next year
in Gil Blas Louis Vauxcelles spoke of "cubist eccentricities."
The group increased in numbers as the years went by; besides
those we hâve mentioned it included Max Jacob, Marie
Laurencin, Gertrude and Léo Stein, wealthy enthusiasts for
the art of the Far East and modem painting, and Daniel-Henry
Kahnweiler who had opened a gallery at 28 Rue Vignon. Many
of them attended Picasso's studio party in 1908 (known as
"le banquet Rousseau") in the Douanières honor. "The studio
had been decorated with festoons of fairy lights and the guests
dined offtrestle tables." ^^ The sequel has often been described:
the appearance of the Douanier in his soft felt hat, with his
little violin, on which he accompanied a song of his own
composition, Clochettes the poem Apollinaire made up on the
spur of the moment (according to one version of the story),
scribbling it on a corner of the table dancing to the strains of
an accordion, foll owd by libations too copious and fréquent
for the equilibrium of many of the guests.
\
;
99
Soon after the Rousseau Banquet the great days of Rue
Ravignan were over; Picasso moved out in October 1910.
"Those boys must hâve won the big prize at the lottery," one
of the removers said to Maurice Raynal who supervised opérations, and there certainly was a world of différence between
Picasso's "cubby-hole" in the Bateau-Lavoir and his big new
studio, with an apartment facing south adjoining it, at 1 1 Boulevard de Clichy, near Place Pigalle. Pablo and Fernande had just
corne back from Horta de Ebro in Spain where they had spent the
summer. It was in this building, owned by Delcassé, ex-Foreign
Minister (who had an apartment in it) that Picasso's Cubism
took définitive form. Hère he made a séries of portraits, amongst
others those of Uhde and Vollard. It was about this time that
a Polish painter, Louis Markous, was introduced by Braque to
Picasso and Apollinaire; the latter advised him to adopt a
pseudonym: Marcoussis, the name of a small town not far
from Paris.^
Parallel with Cubism, whose geometric-abstract images
were essentially static, there developed, a little later, the movement known as Futurism. But whereas the early Cubists,
Picasso, Braque and Gris ,*^ laid down no program and let their
Works speak for themselves, the Futurists, nothing if not
dogmatic, made known their aims in strident manifestos. Chief
of thèse aims was that of suggesting rapid motion by means
of a dynamic rhythm built up in successive touches, fusing
into a more or less cohérent whole. Futurism was the only art
movement of the time promoted solely by Italian artists.
However,
in
its
artist
Montmartre had a large part
and Montmartre that the
who, along with Boccioni ^^ was to be its leading figure
Paris
and
origin, since
in particular
it
was
in Paris
spent his formative years.
It was in 1906 that this young Tuscan, Gino Severini, son
of a ceiling-painter, came to Paris. Though he began by living
100
soon joined up with the Montmartre
group, which was steadily expanding and becoming more and
more international. Steinlen was Swiss, Picasso and Gris were
Spanish, while Van Dongen, one of the artist colony in the
Bateau-Lavoir, had corne from Holland. (At this time Van
Dongen, who always worked in blue dungarees, eked out a
jn Montparnasse, he very
GINO SEVERINI. NORD-SUD, I912.
•JiRCCf
lOI
scanty living
by
selling sketches
Galette and the Moulin
Rouge
made
at the
Moulin de
la
to weekly magazines.) Like
from Poland. Moreover, there was
from abroad coming to try
their luck at the foot of that famous basilica painted turn by
turn by Picasso *^, Braque and Marcoussis the Sacré-Coeur.
Apollinaire, Marcoussis hailed
now
a steady influx of
young
artists
:
GINO SEVERINI. DANSEUSES A MONICO, I913.
102
room at 36 Rue Ballu,
young
dressmakers and the
where his neighbors were mostly
cooks of the well-to-do bourgeois living on lower floors.
Thèse amiable young persons saw to it that he was well fed. He
Severini began by taking an attic
spent much of his time exploring the slopes of the Butte. "One
day," he told me, "when I was walking up Rue Lepic on my
way to the Sacré-Coeur, I collided with a dark young man of
my own
Moulin de la Galette.
was wearing struck me as familiar. 'You're
Italian, aren't you?' I asked. 'Sure, and so are you, unless Tm
much mistaken.' Then I learnt that like myself he came from
Tuscany and was living in Montmartre."
The young man in question was Modigliani. He soon had
had enough of living in his eyrie in Rue Caulaincourt and
moved into a sort of greenhouse at the end of a little garden
near the top of Rue Lepic. There he led a solitary life, surrounded by reproductions of great-master pictures nailed to
the walls. His furniture was of the scantiest a bed, two chairs,
a table and a trunk which served as sofa and "he always wore
corduroy velvet suits and an ultra-flashy scarf." ^ He adored
Leopardi's poetry, was keenly interested in philosophy and his
favorite painters were Picasso and the Douanier Rousseau. A
votary of "modem ideas," he had the courage of his convictions. One evening in the Spielmann restaurant on Place du
Tertre he silenced two young Royalists who were throwing their
weight about "Fm a Jew, and you can go to hell!" and
they were too much flabbergasted to retort. Amedeo ("Dédo"
to his friends) was a drug addict and regularly scoured the cafés
and bars on Place Blanche and Place Pigalle in search of drugs.
During this period, when so many artists were busily producing
what they called "social studies," Modigliani did very little.
about
The type of
âge, just in front of the
hat he
—
—
—
"I
work out
—
at least three pictures a
explained. "What' s the
good of
day
—in
my
head," he
spoiling clean can vas
when
103
nobody
will
buy
my work?" ^^
Rue
After meeting each other as
two young Italian artists
became fast friends, despite Amedeo's addiction to hashish,
which Gino sometimes let himself be persuaded into taking.
But, averse though he might be to "spoiling clean canvas,"
Modigliani was not wasting his time. He was trying to wean
himself from his Italian, rather provincial way of seeing, and
to assimilate the techniques of drawing and brushwork then
prevailing in the big city, where (as he said) one still breathed
described above, in
Lepic, the
"the air of Impressionism."
What was the reason for this brusque incursion of
artists
from ail over the world, eager to scale the "Sacred Hill" and
set up their easels in Montmartre? Was it the renown of the
descendants of the Batignolles group, the impressionist paintwho were coming more and more into favor? Personally
I think that the chief attraction for thèse foreign artists was a
ers,
and a delicacy of color
only to be acquired under the soft, translucent skies of the
Ile de France. Hence the unique appeal of La Ville Lumière,
meeting-place of painters of ail nationalities, most of whom
gravitated around the Sacré-Cœur.
At the time when Clovis Sagot, a picture-dealer who like
VoUard was backing the new men, began to show an interest
in Severini's work (then somewhat neo-impressionist, as can
be seen in his Springtime in Montmartre)^ Severini often went
with Modigliani to visit his one and only buyer, an enterprising
young man named Paul Guillaume who lived in Avenue de
Villiers. Modi usually came back the richer by five or six francs,
which the two friends promptly spent on a dinner before
moving on to Mère Adèle's establishment or the Lapin Agile,
which then was patronized oiï and on by Braque, Gris and
Picasso and regularly by Fernande Olivier, Francis Carco,
Pierre Mac Orlan, Suzanne Valadon and Maurice Utrillo.
certain lightness of touch, a clarity
104
Dorgelès, too, was an occasional visitor. "Those of us who
were not doing too badly used to bring along their girl friends,
young ladies who wore their hair parted down the middle and
sang bits of Pelleas while washing up the dishes." *^
This famous Montmartre café, the Lapin Agile, is situated
at the junction of Rue des Saules and Rue Saint- Vincent.
Formerly known as "Le Cabaret des Assassins," it was renamed
in 1902 when, giving up the "Zut," Frédé took it over
from Adèle, who moved her bistro a little higher up the hill.
The Lapin owed its name to the cartoonist André Gill, who originally lived there and had painted on his door Là, peint A. Gill
quickly corrupted into "Lapin Agile." There were often
what the newspapers described as "shooting affrays" at the
Lapin and in its vicinity. A chronicler of the life of old Montmartre ^^ tells us that Modigliani often used to go to visit
—
home in the nearby Rue Norvins. In
we see her oddly angular and irregular
Béatrice Hastings at her
several of his portraits
Max
Jacob sometimes
"out of Christian
and
hardly less of Modigliani, who sometimes came back fîghting
drunk and started smashing up doors and Windows.
It was this English girl, his "guardian angel" though there
was little angelic about her, who supported Modi from 19 14
to 191 6 and enabled him to continue living in Montmartre (in
Rue Boissonnade). Before moving across to the Left Bank he
had left his greenhouse-studio in Rue Lepic and taken a room
in the building formerly "Le Couvent des Oiseaux" at the
corner of Boulevard de Clichy and Rue de Douai. The last of
his various Montmartre homes was just off Place Pigalle, in
Rue de l'Elysée des Beaux- Arts. When negro art came into vogue
he carved a number of stone heads, showing the influence of
Brancusi, the Rumanian sculptor whose acquaintance he had
features.
charity" since Béatrice
made
slept there
was mortally
in the Cité Falguière.
He
also
afraid of burglars
made
designs for caryatids.
105
many of which
are
now
^^ But he found
out of him and soon
in a private collection.
the handling of the chisel took too
much
reverted to painting.
Modigliani was often to be seen at the Lapin. Personally I
frequented the place only a good deal later when much of its
pristine glamour had departed. One evening Paulo, Frédé's
son, drew my attention to some pink and white canvases hung
above the zinc bar-counter, pictures of the walls and houses of
Montmartre. They were by Maurice Utrillo who was Severini's neighbor round about 1909, after the creator of Futurism
had moved into the last of his Montmartre studios, at 5 Impasse
de Guelma, a cul-de-sac giving on Place Pigalle.
This small building, then quite new, contained fîve studios.
Hère Severini painted his Danse du Pan Pan à Monico, Danseuses
à Monico and Fête à Montmartre. His righthand neighbor was
Raoul Dufy, who like himself was one of the fîrst occupants of
the new studios and who wore in those days an élégant yellow
beard. The next arrivais were Braque and his wife, who occupied two studios on the floor above. Finally, Suzanne Valadon
took the ground floor studio below Severini's, accompanied
by her household, consisting of André Utter with whom she
was living, her son Utrillo, an aged mother and a dog.
"I saw a great deal of my ground-floor neighbors," Severini
told me, "though Utrillo was usually far too drunk to be good
Company. Often at night I came across him in the streets of
Montmartre haranguing a crowd that had gathered round him,
and as he could hardly stand, I helped him home."
Though it has been far les s publicized than the BateauLavoir, Impasse de Guelma was in its day a no less favored resort
of vanguard artists. But only Dufy remained faithful to it till
the end. He had leased the entire fîrst floor, with his studio on
one side and his Hving-room on the other, and time and again
I visited him there. However, apart from some early works.
106
produced when he had not yet developed a truly personal style
(Shrove Tuesday on Boulevard Montmartre and Rue Lepic), Dufy
made hardly any paintings of the district in which he lived.
Perhaps it seemed to him that the pictorial possibilities of the
Montmartre scène had been so thoroughly exploited by Lautrec
and Bonnard that this source of inspiration was exhausted. Yet
was there not still something left for the original artist with
an observant eye? Those white walls, those ramshackle houses,
those humble shops and taverns and little old-world streets
were still waiting for their painter. And this Montmartre, silent,
unnoticed by the sight-seer, patched with crumbling plaster,
was to be Utrillo's great discovery.
MAURICE UTRILLO. THE MOULINS DE LA GALETTE,
108
CA.
I9II.
UTRILLO'S
MONTMARTRE
EVERY time she was awakened in the small hours by policemen
brandishing a warrant of arrest for a "disturbance of the
peace" or a bill for broken Windows, Suzanne Valadon, who now
was living with Utter in her Impasse de Guelma studio, was
painfully reminded of her son's disorderly way of life ^^; of the
stigma of his birth, the refusai of his father (an insurance broker
named Boissy) to admit paternity and Maurice's adoption by
the good-hearted Spanish art critic Miguel Utrillo, a friend of
Utter's. Maurice had started drinking as a boy when he formed
the habit of calling in at the Café des Oiseaux (near Square
d'Anvers) for a drink on his way home from school. The resuit
was that before long he had to undergo treatments for alcoholism, none of which, unhappily, had any lasting effect. Nor had
his mother's life been uneventful; after performing as an acrobat
in a traveling circus, she had worked as an artist's model, fîrst
for Puvis de Chavannes, then for Renoir (in his Dance in the
City and Dance in the Country),
She persuaded her son not without difïiculty to try his
—
hand
at painting,
hoping
it
would
—
take his
mind
off his disas-
trous craving for absinthe.
He began by
in thick slabs of pigment.
When, however, the family moved
Rue Cortot he took to working in
from the Butte Pinson
to
painting à
la Monticelli
manner. Often he left half-finished sketches
in the taverns where he spent so much of his time.
Suzanne herself had been painting for many years; in 1893
she had made an excellent portrait of Erik Satie. But though
"the terrible Maria" turned out drawings and etchings the vigor
of whose Une found favor with Degas, she made the mistake
in her oils of putting too much "muscle" into her brushwork.
Still, if not a really great painter, she was definitely a "character,"
typical of the Montmartre of those days.
Pissarro's early
109
MAURICE UTRILLO. TERRACE IN RUE MULLER
I912.
But even more typical was her son Maurice Utrillo, who
was born on Christmas Day, 1883, when his mother was living
in Rue du Poteau. Since buyers complained of his huge signature
sprawling over the canvas she often signed his early works
in her neat, clear hand. From 1905 on he lived on the Butte
Montmartre. This littie spot of earth was ail his world;
IIO
MAURICE UTRILLO. RUE MULLER, I909.
III
he knew by rote, and loved, its every stone, its every wall, its
every by-way. "With bricks and mortar, stone or roughcast
walls, tiles, asphalt and cernent he built his private paradise." ^^
When painting the roofs and the house-fronts, patterned with
shutters brown or green, of his beloved Montmartre he became
like a man in a trance and forgot that he was a social misfit,
"a bad lot touched by grâce," an outcast whose only redeeming
feature was his dévotion to his mother. He never fully realized
what it was that he put into his pictures. "It was Raffaelli who
impressed me most," he once told Carco, "and my fondest
hope was that one day I might know my job as well as he."
Suzanne Valadon protested: "Raffaelli what nonsense! There
was better stuff in y ou than that!" ^^
Instinctively Utrillo used the most réceptive of ail colors,
the one upon which every thing tells out most clearly: white.
He mixed his white with Montmartre plaster and surrounded
it with browns just kindling into buff, or interspersed it with
those patches of acid green, salmon pink and fuU-bodied red
which give his color-schemes their glorious depth and richness.
White was Utrillo's color, and he exploited ail its nuances,
every physical property of the médium, so as to make us
conscious of the tactile qualities, the grained and rugose texture
of old walls constantly exposed to wind and rain. Utrillo had
a poet's sensé of the eternal behind everything, the timeless
message of the timeworn, of surfaces that men hâve touched
and soiled, patched up, replastered, scoured and repainted,
génération after génération. How eloquently he has exprès sed
this poetry of the weather-beaten in his views of the street
leading up to the last Montmartre mill of the old house with a
steep-pitched roof squeezed between the high buildings of
Rue du Chevalier de la Barre; of Berlioz' "love-nest" discreetly
hidden behind a massive wall; of Mimi Pinson's home with its
farmhouse gâte; of Rue du Mont-Cenis and Place des Abbesses,
—
;
112
MAURICE UTRILLO. RENOIR
in a corner of
frame maker,
which we
fîrst
Utrillo offered a
S
GARDEN, I909-I9IO.
see the premises of Anzoli, picture-
to exhibit an Utrillo in his
barman
window.
When
a picture in exchange for a drink, the
it away. "No damn' use to me!" Everybody felt
about his work with one exception: Clovis Sagot,
who after being a clown had set up as a picture-dealer. Utrillo
was glad to get five francs a picture from him, until Libaude,
owner of a picture-shop in Avenue Trudaine, raised the price
to twenty. Then one afternoon in 1910 Francis Jourdain and
man waved
like that
—
113
Elle Faure called in and Libaude
showed them
his Utrillos.
Jourdain was tremendously impressed, bought two of the
Montmagny townscapes, showed them to Druet and persuaded
the brothers Kapferer and Paul Gallimard to buy several
can vases. And one fine day Octave Mirbeau walked out of
Libaude's with an Utrillo under his arm.^^
MAURICE UTRILLO. PLACE RAVIGNAN, I9II-I915,
L<>tt5;««
114
UL'«^o
MAURICE UTRILLO. RUE D ORCHAMPT,
I912.
—
How often was Utrillo that "graceless child of somber
Saturn" as he called himself given a rough handling by the
local police! Time and again César Gay, who owned a snackbar. Le Casse-Croûte (he often described himself as "Monsieur
Maurice's pupil"), rescued him from custody and locked him
up in a bedroom so as to prevent his drinking. But somehow
Utrillo managed to slip out, and wound up with one of his
—
115
periodic stays in an inebriates' home. "Life hère
no
is
joke,
can assure you," he wrote to Gay from the Villejuif Asylum
in September 191 6. "One can only grin and bear it and try
not to let the depressing atmosphère get one down
What
wonderful books could be written about that district of Paris,
my Montmartre, with its provincial nooks and corners and
Bohemian ways of living It's like a little independent kingdom,
with customs ail its own. How I regret the follies which hâve
brought me to this pHght, and how Fd love to be seated right
now in your bedroom, painting a street scène of houses with
I
.
.
.
!
whitewashed walls!"
On
"Free
April 11, 1920, a mock-solemn proclamation of the
of Montmartre was made, a parochial décla-
Commune"
The "Free Commune" had its own
du Tertre which surely might now be
renamed "Place Maurice Utrillo" in commémoration of the
many views of it he painted. As against the neighboring SacréCœur, with its august associations. Place du Tertre is the focal
point of the everyday life of the district. The fîrst "mayor" of
Free Montmartre, Jules Dépaquit, announced the séparation of
Montmartre from the French State (!), and, under his auspices,
the so-called "Defenders of the Butte" drew up a program
which was published in the March 26 issue of La Vache Enragée.
Inspired by a deep affection for the old Montmartre, playground
of Poulbot's "gamins" and Willette's "pierrots," this program
ration of independence.
town
hall
sponsored,
on
the Place
among
other things, the views of the "anti-sky-
scraper" partisans. In their black
skyscraper" clan
—fîgured the
list
— of members of the "pro-
Cubists and Dadaists. In short,
wearers of sloppy, wide-brimmed hats and artistically
flowing ties declared war on the coïts of the Kahnweiler stable
who paraded on Place du Tertre in sporting costumes. Carrying
the
on the
Steinlen tradition, this
devotees of the Chat Noir and
116
Old Brigade of Montmartre,
that it had stood for, must
ail
hâve watched with jaundiced eyes the rise of Montparnasse,
the new art center now developing in the heart
of the great
city they looked down on from their hilltop.
But the pictures
now being produced in Montmartre were little more than
amusing trifles and had nothing in common with the art
of
Picasso, Gris, Braque, Modigliani and Severini,
or with that
MAURICE UTRILLO. THE LAPIN AGILE, I913.
117
MAURICE UTRILLO. PLACE DU TERTRE,
I92O.
Max
Jacob. In any case thèse men had begun to désert the
on the Butte and to spend their evenings on the Left Bank.
Now was perpetrated at the Lapin Agile the famous
"Boronali" hoax. (Its unavowed target was Matisse, whose art
was so much resented in certain circles that you saw inscriptions
on the Montmartre walls, "Matisse is deadlier than absinthe,"
of
cafés
"Matisse will drive us
118
ail
crazy.")
Some
practical jokers
had the
bright idea of tying a paintbrush to the
tail
of Frédé's donkey,
which duly figured at the
Salon des Indépendants! The canvas was signed "Boronali,"
anagram of "Aliboron," the donkey in La Fontaine's fable.
Utrillo took no part in thèse artists' feuds, but went on
lod "helping"
it
to paint a picture,
painting his beloved Montmartre, the only change being that
now
women
with big behinds. His Une
became more incisive, his colors harsher, and his impasto
smoother, tinged with purple. Younger than Matisse and
Bonnard, and about the same âge as Picasso, he had made
qui te a name for himself by 1925. People were beginning to
recognize the high quality of Utrillo's townscapes, which
though seemingly straightforward "views" devoid of any
concern with aesthetic values, were none the less inspired,
beneath the surface, with a sensibility and a feeling for color
which, in his last works, linked up with the noble landscape
art of Claude and Corot.
Utrillo remained faithful to Montmartre. When in 1926 the
three of them his mother, Utter and himself made a move,
it took them no further than a house he had bought in Rue
Junot, just behind the Moulin de la Galette which he had so
often painted. In one of thèse many pictures of the Moulin
we fînd a touch of typically Montmartroise irony hung on the
right of the entrance is a shopsign: Manufactory of Artistic
Pictures. Landscapes a Speciality. Applj to Maurice Utrillo V. 12, rue
he
included droves of
—
—
;
Cortot, Paris i8e. Beipare of Imitations.
Many years la ter, after his mother' s death
Utrillo,
painters of the day,
book was being
On
and his marriage,
one of the most popular French
who had become
moved
to
Le Vésinet. He died while
this
November 1955, at Dax (Landes).
bedroom was an unfînished canvas on
written, in
the easel in his hôtel
which he then was working yet another Rue Cortot. Thus
still a vision of Montmartre that held his dying eyes
it
:
!
.
.
was
.
119
"M..on fmartre
finishedH That remark is surely as old as the
Hill itself. You heard it made in the dajs of the
Chat Noir and I hâve Utile douht that people often voiced the same
—as
hills
is
the Sacred
lament at the Café Guerhois and the Nouvelle Athènes. Of course
changes Tvere alwajs taking place. The mndmills Michel and Rousseau
painted had vanished one hy one, new houses were going up, houses that
votaries
of the past described as ^^skyscrapers^^
—though
this trans-
atlantic altitude existed only in the imagination of romantic enemies of
^'progress.^^
in
Bruanfs
Ail
songs,
that is left of Rodolphe Salis^ cabaret is enshrined
After heing
revived at the
Bal Tabarin
the ^^French
Cancan*^ has returned in a Moulin Rouge that Lautrec certain ly would
fail to recogni^e.
The Bostock Hippodrome
is
noip
the
picture-house. Gone^ too, is the tangle of ragpickers^ huts
Moulin de
doTvn fences surrounding Renoir^ s
rises forlornly
jphose
la
Gaumont
and tumble-
Galette, which still
above its mouldering floor, worn bj the feet of dancers
dancing dajs are long since done.
Like
the
Bateau-Lavoir,
and drj,^^ ^^ it has
outlived its day. The Café Wepler, jvhence Bonnard painted so many a
Place Clichy, is '^'renovated'' almost everj jear and the Lapin Agile
'^'worm-eaten hulk of an old ship stranded high
has become a show-place for tourists doing
Dufys
death the house at j Impasse de
'-''Paris
Guelma
is
by Night.^^ Since
no longer tenanted
by any painter ; a picture-framer works in the studio which once was
Suî^anne Valadon" s. Utrillo, too,
had forsaken Montmartre, seemingly
for good. But in the end he has returned andfound his last resting-place
in the Saint- Vincent Cemetery, ivhich he so often painted.
Where do
to the
thej take us today, those long flights of steps leading
Sacré-Cœur
ivhich
Vivin
^^
up
has depicted in his daintj, linear
120
TWf:
LOUIS VIVIN. THE SACRE-CŒUR, CA. I92O.
Vivin lived in Montmartre, in Rue Caulaincourt, and exhibited regularly
at the "Foire aux Croûtes" (Daub Market) near Place du Tertre. There
was a time when he went to exhibit his **daubs" on the shelf of a small
shop-window in the Sacré-Cœur marketplace. His works hâve the utmost
deHcacy, the quality of finely built masonry, and are painted stone by
stone, brick by brick, with élégant précision. The living line weaves spiderwise across the canvas. Usually **popular" art tends to be répétitive, but
the pictures of this ex-postman, who with his searching eyes and shaggy
beard had the look of a tramp-philosopher, hâve a distinction ail their own.
Vivin painted many views of Montmartre and the Sacré-Cœur.
121
style ? Is present-day Montmartre no more than a place of piIgrimage
for globe-trotters, mth a church at the highest point of Paris ^ only one
sjmbol amongst others? Perhaps for the moment Montmartre" s prestige
Yet heside the new basilica. Saint Peter^s, its ancient parish
is in éclipse.
church^ perpétuâtes the legend of the martyrs.
And ive are informed that
a ivorkyard mil shortly be installed at 6j Boulevard de Clichy for the
érection of a chape l dedicated to St Rita, patron saint of hopeless cases.
YeSy Montmartre, the old Montmartre, is far from dead,
which lures so many foreign tourists to the Hill
nightlife
is
and
the
no criterion
of its charm. One should visit it in the daytime, preferably in early
morning ivhen shutters are closed and ail is silence. I sometimes go
there at that
to
feast
my
Lacourière the
visit
to see how the last surviving vine is faring,
farm that has outlived the changeful years, to
master-engraver in his eyrie not far from the
favored hour
eyes on the
Sacré-Coeur, or to revive
streets
in
my
and
my memories
taverns he loved so
ivell.
As
of the early Utrillo s in the
I walk,
old songs are bu^j(ing
head, visions of pink or white carnations rise before
the corner of
Rue
my
eyes.
At
des Saules a loving couple locked in a close embrace
shows up against the flight of steps like a single figure hewn in stone.
A young man walks briskly past me, and I can sensé his eagerness
explore this
mth
his.
beginning;
^^
brave nen> ivorld^^
No,
the last
page
is
and gradually
to
supplant
not turned, a new eventful chapter
Montmartre mil always
be
Montmartre.
to
my memories
is
NOTES AND REFERENCES
•
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX OF NAMES
LIST OF COLORPLATES
TABLE OF CONTENTS
NOTES AND REFERENCES
^ On the i5th of August
1534. This was the fîrst step towards thc
founding of the Society of Jésus. The six companions were Francis Xavier,
Diego Laynez, Alfonso Salmeron, Simon Rodriguez, Nicolas Bobadilla
and the Savoyard priest Pierre Lefevre who celebrated the Mass. The keys
of the chapel were made over to Inigo Lopez de Recalde, better known
as St Ignatius of Loyola, by the Révérend Mother Perrette Roudlars,
the assistant sacristan.
2 The Treaty of Montmartre (February
annulled and replaced by another treaty.
6,
1662) was subsequently
^ This incident, which took place on March 30, 1814, was painted by
Vernet in 1820. The picture shows Marshal Moncey on horseback giving
orders to the battalion commander to hold Montmartre Hill against
the advancing Russians. Several well-known figures, notably the writer
Marguery-Dupaty and the painter himself, may also be identified in the
picture. On the building in the right background is a signboard reading
Au père
Lathuille.
* In the Cabinet des Dessins at the Louvre are two albums containing
in ail 48 colored drawings by Georges Michel, mostly small, hastily
jotted sketches for fuU-size pictures. There are many scènes of Montmartre
and Clignancourt ; Jules Claye, a publisher of art books, had them bound
together about 1874 in an album entitled Vues de Paris et de ses environs
par Georges Michel. Thèse two albums were bought by the Louvre from
M. Adolphe Court in April 1892 for 500 francs. The rapid, sketchy exécution of thèse little scènes (one or two brushed in so lightly that the water-
color hardly shows) foreshadows the technique of Jongkind and the
Impressionists they hâve none of the Dutch attention to détail that we
find in Michel's oil-paintings.
;
^
Prosper Dorbec, Uart du paysage
à la fin du Second
124
en France ^ de la fin
du
XVIII*
Empire Paris 1925.
y
November
•
Le
'
Paul Yaki, Montmartre,
®
Gérard de Nerval, La Bohème
*
On
Constitutionnely Paris,
25,
terre des artistes,
1846.
Girard, Paris 1947.
galante.
January 25, 1855, in Rue de
la
Vieille-Lanterne.
siècle
^® We regret the impossibility of publishing a reproduction of The Last
Windmills of Montmartre, a picture painted by Hoguet just before he left
Paris. The curator of the muséum at Szczecin (i.e. Stettin, now in Poland),
where it could once be seen, informs us that it disappeared during the war.
^^ The collection of old postcards
in the Bibliothèque Nationale
(Cabinet des Estampes), Paris, contains a card showing the subject of
Corot's picture. The painting in the Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lyons, depicts
not Rue des Saules but Rue Saint- Vincent (the two streets intersect).
^*
François Daulte, Frédéric
Ba':(ille et
son temps.
Gène va
1952.
"
in
Marcellin Desboutins in a letter to Simonet, August 1872, published
Clément- Janin's La curieuse vie de Marcellin Desboutins, Paris 1922.
Edmond
1*
de Concourt,
in Clément-Janin, op.
cit,
" Georges
Rivière, Renoir et ses amis, Paris 1921.
" Georges
Rivière, op.
"IVe taken
^'
a
little
cit.
room
in
Montmartre, a neighborhood you would
Gogh
to his brother Théo in a letter dated
1875. "It's small but it overlooks a little garden whose walls
are covered with ivy and creepers." Letters to Théo, Amsterdam 1924.
like,"
July
^*
No.
wrote Vincent van
6,
Emile
18,
Bernard,
Geneva
Relations
avec
Toulouse-Lautrec,
Art-Documents,
1952.
1^ Thèse détails are taken from the introduction by Mrs Van GoghBonger, sometime Theo's wife, to the Letters from Vincent van Gogh
to his Brother Théo (in Dutch), Amsterdam 1924.
^^ It was for the walls of Le Mirliton that Lautrec painted his famous
Quadrille de la chaise Louis XIII à r Elysée-Montmartre (1886), the first
of his paintings in which La Goulue figured. In his study of Lautrec
(Skira, Geneva 1953) Jacques Lassaigne points out that Bruant's influence
was responsible for the "social criticism" implicit in such pictures as
Gueule de Bois and
la mie. In the right foreground of Le Quadrille de
la chaise Louis XIII stands the character known as "Le Père la Pudeur,"
employed by the management to see that the bounds of decency were
not overstepped in the course of the evening.
A
*^
Francis Jourdain, Toulouse-Lautrec, Paris 1952.
'*
Alexandre Georget,
VEcho
de Paris.
125
2^ This information is derived from the catalogue of the exhibition
of Lautrec's prints and drawings held in 195 1 at the BibHothèque Nationale.
M. Adhémar gives it in his note on Plate 5, the poster of La Goulue
and Valentin le Désossé dancing at the Moulin Rouge (1891). Joyant,
on the other hand, had described Valentin as a lawyer's debt-collector.
'^'^
24
Maurice Joyant, Henri
2^
Maurice Joyant,
op.
de Toulouse-luiutrec^ Paris 1926.
cit.
The Cirque Fernando (later called Cirque Medrano) made its fîrst
appearance in painting in 1879 with Degas' picture of Aliss Lala (often
referred to mistakenly as "Miss Lola"), a mulatto girl well-known as a
trapèze artist whose star turn was having herself shot out of a cannon.
Lautrec's Circus Rider was done at the Cirque Fernando, as were many
lithographs of the set published in 1899. It was also a favorite haunt of
Seurat, but his large canvas The Circus was still unfinished at his death
2'*
2^
In the
"^^
On
G
June
il
Blas Illustré of July 12, 1891.
20,
1897.
2^ "O
Muse of Montmartre, dainty-fingered working-girl!" Thus
Emile Goudeau invoked the "Muse de la Vachalcade," Mademoiselle
Marguerite Stumpp.
^°
Gustave Coquiot,
Seurat, Paris
1924.
^^ Born of Belgian parents on October
3, 1872, at Nice, Henri Evenepoel
studied art at Brussels before moving to Paris. The letters he wrote when
he was studying there in Gustave Moreau's studio were published in the
Mercure de France (January 15, 1923). His "discovery" of Manet at the
Durand-Ruel Gallery was a turning-point in his career. He knew Lautrec
and was intimate with Steinlen and Forain. Among his fellow students
at Gustave Moreau's studio were Rouault, Marquet and Matisse. The lastnamed often spoke to me of Evenepoel with much affection.
^2
Henri Duvernois.
^^
Clovis Hugues.
^*
Pierre
Mac
Orlan,
Villes, Paris 1929.
^^ Published in
1899 as No. i of the Panthéon-Courcelks
cover illustration was a lithograph by Bonnard.
126
séries,
whose
^^ In
1896, in conjunction with Franc-Nohain, Claude Terrasse and
Alfred Jarry, Bonnard started the Théâtre des Pantins, in Rue Ballu,
with marioncttes (over 300) made by himself. Attendances were small,
but somehow the little theater kept going. Between 1896 and 1898 the
Mercure de France printed six Bonnard lithographs as covers for the
programs.
^' This Moulin Rouge was the central panel of a triptych, the sides
being scènes of women in huge hats and people having supper.
^^
Jaime Sabartès, Picasso
^^
Maurice Raynal, Le Banquet Rousseau^
y
portraits et souvenirs ^ Paris 1946.
in
Les
Soirées de Paris^
January
1914.
15,
*®
Fernande Olivier,
Picasso et ses amis, Paris 1954.
^1
Daniel Henry Kahnweiler, Juan Gris, Paris 1946.
*2
Max
Jacob, Naissance du Cubisme
et autres, in
Les Nouvelles
littéraire sy
1932.
*3
Paris,
Gabriel Reuillard, Le cinquantenaire du Bateau- Lavoir , in Le Monde
January 21, 1952.
In 19 10 Marcoussis was living at 33 bis, boulevard de Clichy. The
his studio looked over the Sacré-Cœur and this is the view
he painted in the picture reproduced hère. The Bateau-Lavoir stood only
about a hundred yards away as the crow Aies. Max Jacob attended Mass
every morning at the Sacré-Cœur and often dropped in at Marcoussis'
studio afterwards. It was there, too, according to Alice Halicka (Mrs Marcoussis), that Apollinaire came one morning after a sleepless night and
read the first pages of his poem Zone to Marcoussis, who later illustrated
*^
Windows of
Apollinaire's Alcools.
*^
José Gonzalès,
the Cubist
*®
first
alias
Juan Gris.
It
was not
until 191
1
that he joined
movement.
Boccioni made his start as a painter before turning to sculpture. The
manifesto of the futurist painters appeared on February 2, 19 10.
*' In
1909. This demonstrated to brilliant effect the technique of
"analytical Cubism." Unfortunately we hâve been unable to discover the
whereabouts of this picture, a photograph of which is owned by
M. Kahnweiler. It was in 1909 that Picasso fuUy worked out the principles
of the new art of which *'analytical Cubism" was the first phase. This is
confirmed by Fernande Olivier and Victor Crastre {Naissance du Cubisme,
Céret 1910). According to the latter it was at Horta de Ebro that Picasso
made his first cubist pictures, which were acquired by Gertrude Stein.
127
^«
Arthur Pfannstiel, Modigliani, with a préface by Louis Latourette,
Paris 1929.
^^
Roland Dorgelès, Montmartre^ mon
^"
Paul Yaki, Montmartre,
pays, Paris 1928.
terre des artistes, Paris
1947.
This collector's most cherished memories are those of his friendship
with Modigliani. I spent an unforgettable afternoon in his house looking
at "Modi's" drawings and paintings. Thèse range from his earliest
designs notably the caryatids and the early oils which reveal a slightly
morbid sensitivity and the joint influence of Lautrec and Picasso's Blue
Period, to The Violoncellist (19 10) in which Modigliani for the fîrst time
showed himself a whoUy original artist owing nothing to others. It is
impossible to form an adéquate idea of his work after his coming to Paris
in 1906 at the âge of twenty-two, without having seen this magnifîcent
collection, gathered by one of those all-too-rare coUectors who love works
of art for their own sake alone, irrespective of their monetary value.
A close study of the drawings in particular (there are whole portfolios
of them) is indispensable for understanding the origins and évolution of
^^
—
—
Modigliani's
style.
In The Arrest, one of his very few figure paintings, Utrillo illustrated
an incident that actually took place in front of La Belle Gabrielle, a cabaret
run by Marie Vizier. Utrillo persisted in visiting the place, though he
continually got into scrapes with one or another of the toughs who enjoyed
the proprietor*s favors. The picture shows the artist about to be led away
to the police-station in Rue Lambert where he was an old acquaintance
of the police-force, which was constantly obliged to intervene in the
drinking brawls he got involved in at ail hours of the day and night.
^2
"Francis Jourdain,
"
Utrillo, Paris 1953.
Francis Carco, Montmartre vécu par Utrillo, Paris 1947.
Besides several views of the Sacré-Cœur, done in what Jakovsky
cobwebbly, fîlamentous style," Vivin painted many other scènes
of Montmartre: Rue de V Abreuvoir, Rue Saint- Rustique, St Peter'' s Church,
The Moulin de la Galette, The Moulin Rouge and The Place du Tertre in Winter.
^^
calls *'his
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Jean Renault
&
Henri Château, Montmartre^ Flammarion, Paris
— Georges Montorgueil, La à Montmartre^ Boudet, Paris 1899.
— Lanoë & Brice, Histoire V Ecole
du paysage
Poussin à Millet
Chasles, Paris 1901. — Erich Klossowski, Die Maler von Montmartre
Steinlen, Toulouse-Lautrec, Léandre),
Bard, Berlin 1903. —
Charles Sellier,
du vieux Montmartre^
Champion, Paris 1904. — Montmartre
U Art
Beau^
Paris 1907. — Bertrand Millanvoye, Anthologie
Montmartre
Ollendorff, Paris 1909. — F.-R. Hervé-Piraux, Histoire
maisons
Les temples
V amour au XVI H"
Montmartre^
Daragon, Paris 1910. — Lucien Lazard, Promenades à Montmartre in
Le Vieux
published under the direction
— R. Jonquet & François
of G. Lenotre, Eggiman, Paris 191
— Antoine
Veuillot, Montmartre
Paris 191
P ARMÉNIE, Autour
moulins (Promenades à
vieux Montmartre)
Delattre, Paris 1922. — Jean-Emile Bayard, Montmartre
plus
Jouve, Paris 1925. —
André Warnod, Les berceaux
jeune
Montmartre
MontAlbin Michel, Paris 1925. — Prosper Dorbec, Uart du paysage
France
du XVIH'
du Second Empire Paris 1925. —
à
Francis Cargo, De Montmartre au Quartier
Albin Michel, Paris 1927. —
Roland Dorgelès, Montmartre^ mon pays, Marcelle Lesage, Paris 1928. —
André Warnod, Les
Montmartre. Gavarni, Toulouse-Lautrec
Renaissance du Livre, Paris 1928. — Pierre Mag Orlan,
Rouen, Montmartre,
N.R.F., Paris 1929. — Paul Lesourd, La Butte
au XX^
Montmartre,
Spes, Paris 1937. — Paul
Yaki, Montmartre,
notes and souvenirs, Girard, Paris
Ed. Jean Chitry,
1947. — RoMi,
rue de Rome, Paris 1950. — Francis Cargo, La
époque au temps
Bruant, Gallimard, Paris 1954. — Jacques Wilhelm, Les
du
1897.
vie
de
de
française
(Willette,
y
J.
Curiosités historiques et pittoresques
et ses artistes ^ in
et le
des poètes de
des petites
de
galantes.
Clichy,
siècle ^
etc.^
^
PariSy souvenirs et vieilles demeures^
P.
2.
autrefois
et
aujourd'hui ^
de nos
9.
travers
le
^
hier et aujourd'hui^
avec les souvenirs de ses artistes et écrivains les
célèbre s ^
de la
parnasse^
en
de la fin
siècle
peinture.
et
la fin
^
latin^
peintres
de
Villes,
Utrillo,
etc.,
des origines
sacrée,
terre
siècle,
des artistes,
Petite histoire des cafés-concerts parisiens.
10,
de
belle
peintres
paysage parisien.
Schools of Painting
—
E. Duranty, La Nouvelle Peinture, Paris 1876.
G. Moore, Confessions
G. Geffroy, Histoire de l'Impressionnisme,
of a Young Man, London 1888.
Paris 1894.
John Rewald, The History of Impressionism, Muséum of
Art, New York 1946.
Victor Crastre, Naissance du Cubisme,
Céret 19 10.
Jean Leymarie, Impressionism ^ 2 vols., Skira, Geneva 1955.
Modem
—
—
—
—
129
Painters of Montmartre
—
Charles Clément, Géricault, Didier, Paris 1868.
P. A. Lemoisne,
Adolphe Tabarant, Manet, N.R.F., Paris 1947.
^
Ambroise Vollard, Renoir^ Paris 191 8.
Gustave Kahn, FantinLatour, Rieder, Paris 1926.
Clément-Janin, La curieuse vie de Marcellin
DesboutinSy Paris 1922.
François Daulte, Frédéric Ba^^ille et son temps
Sir John Rothenstein, Life and Death of Conder^
Cailler, Geneva 1952.
Daniel Henry Kahnweiler, Juan Gris^ Gallimard,
London 1938.
Maurice Joyant, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Floury, Paris
Paris 1946.
Francis Jourdain, Toulouse-Lautrec, Tisné, Paris 1952.
1926.
Jacques
Lassaigne, Toulouse-Lautrec, Skira, Geneva 1953.
Pierre Courthion,
Bonnard, peintre du merveilleux, Marguerat, Lausanne 1945.
Alfred
Sensier, Georges Michel, Lemerre, Paris 1873.
Léo Larguier, Georges
André Salmon, Modigliani, Paris 1926.
Michel, Delpeuch, Paris 1927.
Arthur Pfannstiel, Modigliani, préface by Louis Latourette, Paris 1929.
Gino Severini,
Jacques Lipchitz, Modigliani, Flammarion, Paris 1954.
Tutta la vita di un pittore, Garzanti, Milan 1956.
Jaime Sabartès, Picasso,
Alexandre Cirici-Pellicer, Picasso
portraits et souvenirs, Paris 1946.
Fernande Olivier, Picasso et ses
avant Picasso, Cailler, Geneva 1950.
Picasso, documents iconographiques, préface and notes
amis, Paris 1954.
Catalogue of the 1955 Picasso
by Jaime Sabartès, Cailler, Geneva 1954.
Georges Rivière, Renoir
Exhibition, Musée des Arts décoratifs, Paris.
Adolphe Tabarant, Maurice Utrillo,
et ses amis, Floury, Paris 1921.
Francis Cargo, Montmartre vécu par Utrillo
Bernheim, Paris 1926.
Pierre Courthion,
(with 22 gouaches by Maurice Utrillo), Paris 1947.
Maurice Utrillo, Marguerat, Lausanne 1948.
Francis Jourdain, Utrillo,
Braun, Paris 1953.
Vincent van Gogh, Brieven aan ^ijn Broeder, 3 vols.,
Amsterdam 1924.
Degas Pion, Paris 1954.
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
INDEX OF NAMES
Académie Suisse
Adhémar
Albi
BoissY, Utrillo's father
27.
Bonaparte Joseph
126 (note 23).
Jean
BoNNARD
57.
Ancourt, printer 73.
Andrée EUen 34.
Anquetin Louis 46, 52.
Antwerp, Academy of Fine Arts 46.
Anzoli, picture-frame maker 113.
Apollinaire Guillaume
Barbizon School 14.
Barcelona 90.
Bateau-Lavoir 86, 90, 92, 99/101, 106,
Belleville
109.
14.
9,
;
Le Chat Noir 44, 57, 58, 69, 78, 89,
116, 120; Le Divan Japonais 69;
L'Elysée-Montmartre 44, 64, 125
Le Lapin Agile 104/106,
(note 20);
117, 118, 120; Le Mirliton 58,125,
(note 20); Le Moulin Rouge 58,
59, 61/66, 69, 70, 72, 77, 80, 82, 86,
88, 89, 102, 120, 126 (note 23),
127 (note 37), 128 (note 55); La
Reine Blanche 44, 61; Le Tabarin
88, 89, 120; Le Tambourin 52.
131
and Restaurants: A l'Ami
Emile 99; Bar Austin Fox 96;
Cafés
Restaurant of M™e Bataille
47;
Café Boivin
32; Chez la Mère
Adèle 104; Le Casse-Croûte 115;
Auberge du Clou 78; Les Décadents 69 Le Franc-Buveur
5 5
Café Guerbois
27, 28, 32, 120;
Le Hanneton 69; Brasserie Muller
27; La Nouvelle- Athènes 32, 34,
109; Chez
35, 120; Les Oiseaux
Olivier 44; Chez le Père Lathuile
32, 41, 124 (note 3); Le Point de
Vue 51, 55; Spielmann Restaurant
103; Chez Wepler
32, 85, 120;
Café "Le Zut*' 89, 90, 105.
;
;
Caillebotte Gustave
Francis 104, 112; Montmartre
vécu par Utrillo (Paris 1947)
128
(note 54).
Casagemas Caries 86, 89.
Ramon
Catalonia
86.
86.
CÉZANNE Paul
25,
Rue
des
Chicago, Art Institute 66.
Chopin Frédéric 18.
C1GERI Eugène 24, 26.
LiBAUDE,
114.
Liszt Franz 18.
Louis XIV, King 8.
Loyola, St Ignatius of 7, 124 (note i).
LucE Maximilien 89.
Lyons, Musée des Beaux- Arts
125
(note II).
Pierre
82, 104; Villes
126 (note 34).
Magazines and Papers:
Ami du
Peuple %\
Assiette au Beurre 76;
Le Constitutionnel
124 (note 6);
Escarmouche
73; Le Gil Blas
Illustré
64, 99, 126 (note 27);
Impressionniste
38; Le Mercure
126 (note 31),
de France
127
(note 36); Le Monde 127 (note 43);
Les Nouvelles Littéraires 127 (note
42) The Pilgrim 5 5 Revue Blanche
73; Les Soirées de Paris 127 (note
iiG', La Vie
3 9) La Vache Enragée
Lacourière, master-engraver
La Faille J. B. de. Van Gogh
La Fontaine Jean de 119.
Lamy Franc 36.
Lassaigne Jacques
125 (note
Laurencin Marie 96, 99.
Lautrec Henri de Toulouse-
The
The
;
Mac Orlan
24, 25).
Karr Alphonse
;
Clown Boum-Boum at the Cirque
Fernando 66, 68;
Corner in the
Moulin de la Galette 67; Gueule de
Bois
125 (note 20); Jane Avril
Dancing 66; The Moulin Rouge 62,
63 Quadrille de la chaise Louis XIII
à r Elysée-Montmartre
125 (note
20); The Trace Horse oj the Bus
Laynez Diego 124
Lefevre Pierre 124
Leopardi Giacomo
4).
JuNYER Sébastian
125 (note 20);
Rouge
63;
Cir eus -Rider 66, 126 (note 26)
Line^ Place Clichy
55).
Japanese prints 65, 70.
Jarry Alfred 78, 127 (note
124 (note
A la mie
Moulin
the
A
76, 89.
Jacque Charles 14.
Jakovsky 128 (note
At
70.
Maître Edmond
Maizeroy René,
Blas Illustré
27/29, 31.
in the Gil
69, 126 (note 27).
article
Mallarmé Stéphane 34.
Manet Edouard
26/32,
126
35,
(note 31); Che^i le Père Lathuile 41 ;
Portrait oJ George Moore
35.
Manolo Manuel Martincz
Manyac Pedro 86, 89.
Marat Jean-Paul, U Ami
Offenbach Jacques
93.
du Peuple
8.
Marcoussis Louis (Louis Markous)
99,
100,
127 (note 44); The
102,
Sacré-Cœur
64.
92, 100, 104, 127
(note 47); Picasso et ses amis (Paris
1954) 127 (note 40).
Oller brothers 61, 64.
Olivier Fernande
Marguery-Dupaty 124 (note 3).
Marquet Albert 89, 126 (note 31).
Matisse Henri
Passage de l'Elysée des BeauxArts 77.
Place des Abbesses
112; Place
Blanche 26, 103; Place Clichy 34,
43, 56, 57, 73, 77, 80, 82, 83, 85,
135
i2o; Place des Hirondelles (now
Christiani)
lo; Place Pigalle
26, 32, 34, 100, 103, 106; Place
Ravignan 89,94,114; Place du Tertre
103, 116, 118, 121, 128 (note 55).
Rue
Quai d'Anjou
52; Quai SaintMichel 96.
Rue de l'Abreuvoir 128 (note 55);
Rue Ballu 103, 127 (note 36); Rue
Berthe 93; Rue Blanche 82; Rue
Boissonnade
105; Rue Caulaincourt 70, 77, 103, 121; Rue Champollion 90; Rue Le Chapelais 73;
Rue du Chevalier de la Barre 10,
112; Rue Clauzel
50; Rue de
Clichy
8; Rue Coquillière
64;
Rue Cortot 36, 37, 58, 109, 119;
Rue des Dames 32; Rue Damrémont 74; Rue de Douai 73, 105;
Rue de l'Elysée des Beaux-Arts
106; Rue Fontaine 34, 69, 70, 77;
Rue Ganneron
70; Rue Carreau
92; Rue Junot
119; Rue Laffitte 89; Rue Lambert
128 (note 52); Rue Laval
(now Rue Victor-Masse) 46, 57;
Rue Lepic 44, 46, 55, 77, 103/105;
Rue de Londres
19; Rue du
Mont-Cenis
112; Rue
8,
44,
Muller iio, m; Rue Norvins 18,
24, 26,
55, 105; Rue d'Orchampt
Rue de la Paix (now Rue de
1
5
la Condamine)
28; Rue Pigalle
iio;
70, 74, 77; Rue du Poteau
Rue Ravignan (now Place Emile
Goudeau)
90, 93, 100; Rue La
Rochefoucauld
Rue des
77;
Rosiers 17; Rue Saint-Denis 18;
Rue Saint-Georges 34, 36, 37; Rue
Saint-Rustique 128 (note 55); Rue
Rue
Gabrielle
86;
;
Saint- Vincent
8,
18,
19,
22,
24,
105, 125 (note II); Rue des Saules
23» 25, 55> 58, 105, 122, 125 (note
II); Rue de Seine
90; Rue Tholozé 84; Rue Tourlaque 44, 70, 73
;
136
Rue Victor-Masse
90; Rue de la
124 (note 9);
Rue Vignon 99; Rue Visconti 28.
Square d'Anvers
109; Square
Saint-Pierre 78; Square Vintimille
Vieille-Lanterne
(now
Place
Adolphe Max)
80.
Petit Eugène
32.
Pfannstiel Arthur, Modigliani (Paris
128 (note 48).
1929)
Picasso Pablo
93,
96,
86,
98/104,
87, 89, 90, 92,
117,
119, 127
(notes 38, 40, 47), 128 (note 51);
Bal Taharin
88, 89; The Blue
Room 89, 91; The Bock (Portrait
of Jaime Sabartès)
89; The Burial
of Casagemas 89; Can-Can
87;
Les Demoiselles d'Avignon 98; The
Moulin de la Galette
87; Portrait
of Gustave Coquiot 89; Portrait of
Vollard 100; Portrait of Uhde 100.
PiCHOT Ramon
90.
Pissarro Camille 27, 48, 5 0,78, 89, 109
The Outer Boulevards 4 8 Street in Montmartre 2 5 The Telegraph Tower 2 5
PouLBOT Francisque 116.
Princet, mathematician 99.
Puvis DE Chavannes Pierre 70, 109.
;
;
;
Rachou Henri
70.
Raffaelli Jean-François
50, 112.
Ramsgate 5 5
Raynal Maurice 99, 100; Le Banquet
Rousseau in Les Soirées de Paris
(January 15, 19 14) 127 (note 39).
Rayon d'Or
Realism
64.
26.
Rembrandt
14, 24.
Renoir Auguste 27/29,31,34,36,37,
42,44,45,65,77, 109, 113, 120, 125
(notes 15,
1
6)
;
Building in Progress on
Sacré-Cœur 45 Dance in the City
109; Dance in the Country 109; In a
Café 40; The Moulin de la Galette
36, 39; Place Clichy 43; Portrait of
M^^ Charpentier iG\ The Swing 36.
the
;
Reuillard
Le
Gabriel,
naire du Bateau-Lavoir in
127 (note 43).
(January 21, 1952)
Rictus Jehan 74.
Rivière Georges
32, 37; article in
U Impressionniste
amis (Paris
cinquante-
Le Monde
1921)
38; Renoir et ses
125 (notes 15,
SiMONET
125 (note 13).
SiSLEY Alfred
RoDRiGUEZ Simon 124 (note i).
RouAULT Georges 126 (note 31).
RouDLARS Perrette 124 (note i).
Rousseau Henri (Le Douanier) 99,
89, 90; Picasso^
portraits et souvenirs (Paris 1 946) 127
78, 120.
(note
i).
Salon 1868
28; Salon 1870
28;
Salon d'Automne 1908 99; Salon
des Indépendants 119.
64.
Sarrazin Jehan
69.
A
Szczecin (Stettin, now in Poland),
Muséum 125 (note 10).
Père
50, 52, 53.
Tapie de Céleyran Gabriel 63.
Terrasse Claude
127 (note 36);
Lieds de Montmartre 78; PanthéonCour celle s
126 (note 35).
Théâtre des Pantins 127 (note 36).
Théophile, article in Le
Constitutionnel 14, 124 (note 6).
Tige, La 65.
Thoré
Toulouse
70.
Uhde Wilhelm
26.
100.
Utrillo Maurice
14.
Seurat Georges
30); The
26);
Island of
64; London Nights
29.
30, 91.
Sensier Alfred 13,
Sescau Paul 63.
18.
18.
Troyon Constant
78, 109.
Schôlderer Otto
Segatori, La 52.
126 (note 29).
12.
Symbolism 80.
Symons Arthur
Tanguy
(note 38).
Sagot Clovis 104,113.
Salis Rodolphe 57, 58,
Salmeron Alfonso 124
Salmon André 96.
50, 73, 77, 126 (note
Circus 66, 71, 77, 126 (note
Sunday Afternoon on the
La Grande Jatte 50, 77.
Severini Gino 100, 103, 104, 106,
117; Danseuses à Monico 102, 106;
Fête à Montmartre 106; Nord-Sud
loi; Springtime in Montmartre 104.
20, 86, 104, 106/
128 (notes 52, 53, 54);
The Arrest 128 (note 5 2) The Lapin
Agile 117; The Moulins de la Galette
108; Place Ravignan
114;
Place du Tertre 118; Renoir' s Garden
119; Rue Muller
113; Rue Cor tôt
Rue d'Orchampt 115; Terrace
III
in Rue Muller
iio,
120,
122,
;
;
Utrillo Miguel 86., 109.
Utter André 106, 109, 119.
137
1
Valadon Suzanne
104, 106, 109,
112, 120; Portrait of Erik Satie 109.
125 (note 19); Letters from Vincent
van Gogh to his Brother Théo (Amsterdam 1924) 125 (notes 17, 19).
Van Gogh Théo
46, 48, 49, 50,
125 (notes 17, 19).
Van Gogh Vincent 46/55, 57, 125,
(notes 17, 19); Boulevard de Clichy
49; Im Guinguette
54, 55; Montmartre (Le Café du Point de Vue)
51, 5 5 ; The Moulin de la Galette 47 ;
Le Père Tanguy 52, 53; Portrait
of Emile Bernard 50.
Varenne-Saint-Hilaire, La
Vauxcelles Louis
Venice
25.
Asylum 116.
Villon François 10.
Vincent of Paul, St 8.
ViviN Louis 120, 121, 128
Villejuif
(note 55);
The Sacré-Cœur 121, 128 (note 55);
The Moulin de la Galette^ The Moulin
Rouge^ Rue de r Abreuvoir^ Rue SaintRustique^ St Peter's Church^ The
Place du Tertre in Winter 128 (note 55).
ViziER Marie 128 (note 52).
VoLLARD Ambroise, Gallery 8, 100,
104.
VoLLON Antoine, The
Galette
VuiLLARD Edouard
Clichy
Wagner
Moulin de
la
21, 23.
73,
80;
Place
82.
Richard
28.
Weill Berthe, Gallery 86,
Willette Adolphe 116.
90.
99.
Xanrof, Le Fiacre (song)
Xavier Francis 124 (note
44.
Venturi Lionello 26.
Verlaine Paul 78.
Vermeer Jan 20.
Vernet Horace 14, 124
Yaki Paul
(note 3);
1947)
128 (note 50).
ZlDLER
Vigny Alfred de
Zola Emile
18.
i).
55; Montmartre^ terre des
artistes (Paris
Défense of Paris at the Clichy TollGate 9, 14, 124 (note 3).
Vésinet, Le 119.
69.
61, 64.
29, 31.
124 (note
7),
THE COLORPLATES
BAZILLE,
Bazille,
Frédéric (i 841-1870).
1870. Louvre, Paris
The
Studio, détail:
Louvre, Paris
BELLARDEL,
Montmartre
BONNARD,
Rouge,
The
Edmond
Studio, détail: Monet, Manet,
30
Maître playing the Piano, 1870.
31
Napoléon-Joseph (1831-?). Rue d'Orchampt
in 1864. (10^4x12%^) Musée Carnavalet, Paris.
Pierre (i 867-1947). Sketch of a Poster for the
1892. (10^x7%")
ca.
Hillman Collection,
1904.
New
(32^x16%^)
York
Boulevard de Clichy by Night,
Maurice Denis Collection
ca. 1907.
Mr
.
24
Moulin
ca.
The Boulevard,
at
•
72
and Mrs Alex L.
75
(iô^AxiS'/bO Formerly
79
Boulevard des Batignolles, 1907. (18x22%^) Private Collection,
81
Paris
Place Clichy, 191 2. (55x801/20 Private Collection, Paris
Rue Tholozé, Montmartre,
F. Colin Collection,
BOUHOT,
ca.
Mr
83
and Mrs Ralph
New York
84
Etienne (1780-1862). St Peter's Church, Montmartre,
1825. (11 '/s
BRAQUE,
191 7.
(26x13720
...
XI 33/8") Musée Carnavalet, Paris
Georges (1882). The Sacré-Cœur, 1910.
16
(21 72X16%'')
Private Collection, Roubaix
97
CÉZANNE,
Paul (18 39-1 906). Rue des Saules, Montmartre, 18671869. (12Î/2X16V8O Georges Renand Collection, Paris
....
23
COROT,
Camille (1796-1875). The Moulin de la Galette at Montmartre (détail), 1840. Musée d'Art et d'Histoire, Geneva
.
.
The Moulin de la Galette at Montmartre, 1840. (io%xi3%'')
Musée d'Art et d'Histoire, Geneva
Rue Saint-Vincent, Montmartre, ca. 1850-1860. (i^YzXi^Vi")
Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lyons
3
19
22
DAGUERRE,
Louis (1787-185 1). General View of Paris from
Montmartre, ca. 1830. (9x14720 Musée Carnavalet, Paris
.
.
20
139
DEGAS, Edgar
The Absinthe
(1834-1917).
(détail),
1876-1877.
Louvre, Paris
Women
33
in a Café at
Montmartre
(détail), 1877. Pastel
Louvre (Cabinet des Dessins),
type.
EVENEPOEL,
détail,
on Mono-
Paris
38
Henri (1872-1899). The Spaniard in Paris
Musée des Beaux- Arts, Ghent
(Iturrino),
1899.
FANTIN-LATOUR,
Théodore (18 36-1 904). The
Batignolles, 1870. (8oy4Xio6") Louvre, Paris
GÉRICAULT, Théodore
(i 791-1824).
(i9%x24''') Louvre, Paris
The
76
Studio
at
Les
29
Plaster Kiln,
1
822-1 824.
15
GRIS, Juan
191
5.
(i 887-1927). Still Life and Landscape (Place Ravignan),
(45%X35") Walter and Louise Arensberg Collection,
Muséum
of Art, Philadelphia
94
GUILLAUMIN,
Armand
(i 841-1927).
Montmartre,
(ziViXz^Yz'') Private Collection, Geneva
MANET,
Edouard (i 832-1 883). Portrait of George Moore, ca.
Mrs Ralph J. Hines Collection, New York
(253/4X32")
Chez le père Lathuile
Tournai
MARCOUSSIS,
(15x20^2")
(détail),
1879.
25
1879.
...
35
Musée des Beaux- Arts,
41
(1883 - 1941). The Sacré-Cœur,
Alice Halicka Collection, Paris
Louis
Mme
1865.
1910.
98
MICHEL,
Georges (1763-1843). View of Montmartre. (7x113/4''')
Watercolor Drawing. Louvre (Cabinet des Dessins), Paris
.
MODIGLIANI, Amedeo
(1884-1920). Portrait of
1917. (3672 X23y2''') Private Collection, Paris
Max
.
Jacob, 191695
PICASSO, Pablo (1881). The Moulin de la Galette, 1900.(24 14 x 34^20
Collection of Mr and Mrs J. K. Thannhauser, New York
.
Bal Tabarin, 1901. (27^2 x
Bradford, Pa
The
Blue
Washington
140
Room,
21'')
1901.
By Courtesy of Mr
11
.
87
T. E. Hanley,
88
(20x241/2")
Phillips
Collection,
91
Camille (1830-1903). The Outer Boulevards,
25340 Musée Marmottan, Paris
PISSARRO,
(21 Î4x
RENOIR, Auguste
(i
841-19 19).
The Moulin de
la
1879.
48
Galette (détail),
1876. Louvre, Paris
In a Café,
Otterlo
1
39
876-1 877. (i3y4Xii'')
Rijksmuseum KrôUer-Mûller,
40
Place Clichy, ca. 1880. (z4ViXziy/') Collection of the Rt.
R. A. Butler, London
Hon.
43
Building in Progress on the Sacré-Cœur, ca. 1900. (12% x 16 14")
Dr A. L. Mayer Bequest, Bayerische Staatsgemàldesammlungen,
Munich
45
ROUSSEAU,
Théodore (1812-1867). Storm Effect.
martre. (9x14") Louvre, Paris
SEURAT,
View of Mont12
Georges (1859-1891). Sketch for **The Circus," 1891.
(2iy2Xi8'0 Louvre, Paris
SEVERINI, Gino
(1883).
Collection, Milan
71
Nord-Sud, 191 2. (19^4x25") Emilio
Jesi
loi
Danseuses à Monico, 191 3. (34^2X4672''') Private Collection,
Geneva
102
TOULOUSE-LAUTREC,
of the Bus
Line,
Henri de
Place
(i
Clichy,
864-1901). The Trace Horse
1888. (321/4x20^2") Private
Collection, Paris
56
Poster for the Moulin Rouge. La Goulue, 1891. (761/2x48")
R. G. Michel Collection, Paris
59
Bruant in his Cabaret,
R. G. Michel Collection, Paris
60
Aristide
1893.
(5oX36y8'0
The Moulin Rouge, détail: Valentin le Désossé,
Courtesy of Mr Henry P. Mcllhenny, Philadelphia
At the Moulin Rouge, détail: Dr Gabriel Tapie de
Poster.
1890.
By
62
Céleyran,
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Paul Sescau, 1892. By Courtesy of
the Art Institute of Chicago
A
Corner in the Moulin de la Galette, 1892. (40x39'')
Mrs Chester Dale Collection, New York
Mr
63
and
The Clown Boum-Boum at the Cirque Fernando, 1893.
(2272X14^2") Mrs Chauncey McCormick Collection, Chicago
67
68
141
UTRILLO,
ca.
191
Maurice (1883-1955). The Moulins de
(28%x2o%'') Private Collection, Paris
Galette,
la
108
1.
Terrace in
Rue
Muller,
1912. (19^x24'') Private Collection,
Bern
Rue
iio
Muller,
1909. (iSy^xi^Vi')
Private Collection, Paris.
Mr
By
Ravignan, 1911-1915. (z^ViXzSVz")
Grégoire Tarnopol, New York
82, 83, 95, 97, 98, III, 121),
Basel (pages 3, 19, 45, 4'j, 94, 102, iio, iiy, 118),
by Claudio Emmer, Milan (page loi),
Hans Hinz,
by Henry B. Beville, Washington (pages 35, 51, 62, 63, 6y, 68, 75, 84, 8j,
88, 113, 114, 115).
Photograph on page 49 obligingly lent by the magazine Du, Zurich.