Sort By:
Hommage to Cezanne, 1900by Edouard Vuillard
12" x 15" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Lilcas, c. 1899by Edouard Vuillard
12" x 19" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Portrait of Ker Xavier Roussel, c. 1890by Edouard Vuillard
12" x 22" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Reader, 1896by Edouard Vuillard
14" x 20" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Alley, 1908-1908by Edouard Vuillard
14" x 20" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Jeanne Lanvin, c. 1933by Edouard Vuillard
18" x 17" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Metro, Villers Station, 1916by Edouard Vuillard
30" x 12" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Portrait of Jeanne Lanvin, c. 1933by Edouard Vuillard
20" x 18" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Girls Walking, c. 1891-92by Edouard Vuillard
14" x 18" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Sacre-Coeur Seen from the Painter's Window Before 1940by Edouard Vuillard
12" x 15" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Forge: Weapons Factory in Lyon, 1916-1917by Edouard Vuillard
20" x 10" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Thadee Natanson, Ker-Xavier Roussel and Vuillard's Reflection in the Mirror, 1907-1908by Edouard Vuillard
14" x 14" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Glass of Madeiraby Edouard Vuillard
20" x 12" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Library, 1911by Edouard Vuillard
14" x 19" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Arthur Fontaine, c. 1906by Edouard Vuillard
14" x 19" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Weapon factory at Lyon: the Turns, 1916-1917by Edouard Vuillard
24" x 11" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Red Parasol, 1894by Edouard Vuillard
10" x 28" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Woman in Blue, c. 1925-1930by Edouard Vuillard
14" x 20" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Portrait of Madame Henri Vaquezby Edouard Vuillard
24" x 13" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Henri Xavier Fontaine, 1920by Edouard Vuillard
18" x 19" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Portrait of Princess Bibesco, Nee Elizabeth Asquithby Edouard Vuillard
16" x 22" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Madame Vuillard Holding a Bowl, 1897by Edouard Vuillard
18" x 20" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Haystack, 1907-1908by Edouard Vuillard
16" x 22" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Girls Playing, 1894by Edouard Vuillard
12" x 30" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Salon with Three Lamps, Rue Saint-Florentin, 1899by Edouard Vuillard
26" x 16" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Ferryman, 1897by Edouard Vuillard
26" x 18" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Square Berlioz Sketchby Edouard Vuillard
28" x 20" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Study for a Portrait of Pierre Bonnard c. 1930by Edouard Vuillard
16" x 12" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Flowers in a Vaseby Edouard Vuillard
18" x 14" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
After the Mealby Edouard Vuillard
18" x 14" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Winter Garden with Peacock, 1939-1940by Edouard Vuillard
14" x 20" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Children Playing and Nurses in Paris Park, 1894by Edouard Vuillard
10" x 31" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Maisonnette at l'Etang-la-Ville, c. 1900by Edouard Vuillard
24" x 14" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Interrogation, 1894by Edouard Vuillard
12" x 29" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Little Girls Playing, 1894by Edouard Vuillard
12" x 30" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Chapel at the Chateau of Versailles 1917-1919by Edouard Vuillard
16" x 24" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Sort By:
Artist Jean-Édouard Vuillard (1868 – 1940) was born in Cuiseaux, France. He was a painter, printmaker, and decorator who had great passion for his work. Edouard Vuillard studied art at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and Académie Julian. In 1889, Vuillard, together with a group of student like Felix Valloton, Ker-Xavier Roussel, Paul Serusier, Pierre Bonnard and Maurice Denis, formed an arts group which they called the Nabis (“Prophets”). The group drew their inspiration from Paul Gauguin, a great painter of their time. Vuillard lived with his widowed mother until her death. His mother was a seamstress, and many of Vuillard’s works were also influenced by his mother. His work dealt mainly with dressmaking and domestic scenes set in his mother’s bourgeois home. His mother’s influence can be seen in his artwork, Public Garden, a series of nine vertical decorative panels, which he did in 1894. Vuillard considered art as a form of decoration as did other artists in his group. He was commissioned to create this series as panels to be installed in a private home. In the panels, he portrayed women and children in the public gardens of Paris. He applied the paint in distinct areas of patterned colors producing 2D, tapestry-like effect.
Vuillard advocated a symbolic approach to color, and usually applied his paint in ways that emphasized the flat surface of the canvas. His admiration of Japanese woodcuts inspired him to use simplified shapes and strong contours. He produced so many pieces of high quality artwork. That’s why today framed Edouard Vuillard art are found in many galleries and in many private and public collections.