Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901)
Henry Toulouse-Lautrec, born to one of the oldest noble
families in France, broke both his legs in early
adolescence, and they never developed properly. For the
rest of his brief existence he remained a dwarf,
alienated from his family's fashionable life. He learned
to paint, and took refuge in the night life of Paris,
which he depicted with consummate skill - scenes of
cafes, theatres, and cabarets. All of his portrayals are
prompted by the same uncritical acceptance of the facts
of Parisian night life that he wished for his own
deformity and found only in this shadowy world. At the
Moulin Rouge, of 1892, was influenced by Degas, whom he
deeply admired. Toulouse-Lautrec's line was sure, almost
as much as that of his idol, but his tolerant humanity
was entirely his own.
The little artist can be made out
toward the top of the picture in profile, just to the
left of centre alongside his towering cousin and
constant companion. It is significant that, to reinforce
the psychological impact of the picture,
Toulouse-Lautrec extended it on all four sides,
particularly at the bottom and at the right. The
plunging perspective of a balustrade in the added
section pushes the little group huddled about the table
into the middle distance, while it forces toward us with
startling intensity the face of a heavily powered
entertainer, so lighted from below that the shadows are
green. Toulouse-Lautrec's smart and vivid drawing style,
his brilliant patterning, and surprising colour
contrasts were the dominant influence in Paris when in
1900, eight years after the picture was painted, the
young Pablo Picasso arrived from Spain.
Literature: Book "Western European
art" A.P. Minyar-Belorucheva |