Two Dogs (Bonnard) Explained

Two Dogs
Other Language 1:French
Other Title 1:Deux Chiens
Image Upright:1.3
Artist:Pierre Bonnard
Year:1891
Medium:Oil painting on canvas
Movement:Post-Impressionism
Nabis
Height Metric:36,3
Width Metric:39.7
Museum:Southampton City Art Gallery
City:Southampton

Two Dogs (French: Deux Chiens) is an oil-on-canvas painting by the French artist Pierre Bonnard, created in 1891. It is held at the Southampton City Art Gallery, in Southampton.[1]

History and description

In 1891, Bonnard entered a competition to design dining room furniture. Although his project never materialized, Bonnard used an already existing cabinet door design for his painting Two Dogs. The painting depicts two brown poodles playing, one up and other down, both barking, in a green floor, while two flowers can be seen at the right. The poodles may have been modeled on Bonnard's own dog, Ravageau. The simple but expressive composition, as well as the use of several "color blocks" shows the artist's interest in Japanese prints. In this work, along with the painting Study for a Cat (1890), Bonnard tries to use the influence of the Japanese masters and revive pure decorativeness with life impressions. At the same time, dark dogs are often a repetitive and important theme for the artist.[2] [3] [4]

Provenance

In 1963, the painting was given to the Southampton City Art Gallery by the will of the gallery owner and collector Arthur Tilden Jeffress.

Notes and References

  1. https://www.southamptoncityartgallery.com/object/sotag-196360/ Two Dogs, Southampton City Art Gallery Official Website
  2. https://www.southamptoncityartgallery.com/object/sotag-196360/ Two Dogs, Southampton City Art Gallery Official Website
  3. Nathalia Brodskaya, Bonnard, Parkstone International, 2011, pp. 14-15, ISBN 9781780421230
  4. VĂ©ronique Serrano, A Vision of Cats and Dogs: Bonnard and Animality, Silvana Editoreale, University of California, 2016, p. 150