Who Killed Marthe Bonnard : Madness, Morbidity and Pierre Bonnard's 'The Bath'
- Submitting institution
-
University of Ulster
- Unit of assessment
- 32 - Art and Design: History, Practice and Theory
- Output identifier
- 76475377
- Type
- D - Journal article
- DOI
-
10.1386/jcp.4.2.267_1
- Title of journal
- Journal of Contemporary Painting
- Article number
- -
- First page
- 267
- Volume
- 4
- Issue
- 2
- ISSN
- 2052-6695
- Open access status
- Not compliant
- Month of publication
- October
- Year of publication
- 2018
- URL
-
https://ulster.sharepoint.com/:b:/s/REF2021/EQ4n9wzO32VHr_OP3zix02wBW8Y35IKcs23JMRGUgqvu5Q?e=G9qVT9
- Supplementary information
-
-
- Request cross-referral to
- -
- Output has been delayed by COVID-19
- No
- COVID-19 affected output statement
- -
- Forensic science
- No
- Criminology
- No
- Interdisciplinary
- No
- Number of additional authors
-
0
- Research group(s)
-
A - Art, Space & Place
- Proposed double-weighted
- No
- Reserve for an output with double weighting
- No
- Additional information
- This research highlights for the first time the problem of gender in the painting of Pierre Bonnard (1867–1947) as recognised by the peer reviewers, making an important and innovative contribution to the understanding of Bonnard’s life and work. This new argument ruptured the history of Bonnard literature which operates to subsume Bonnard within the modernist canon. The article argued that the gender ambiguities in Bonnard’s practice problematize these attempts to read his paintings using modernist tropes.
There is an ongoing revaluation of Pierre Bonnard, beginning with a retrospective at the Centre Georges Pompidou in 1984 and witnessed most recently in ‘Pierre Bonnard; Painting Arcadia’ at the Fine Arts Museum, San Francisco 2016. The resulting body of literature, from reviews to catalogue essays, operates to subsume Bonnard within the modernist canon. However, the gender ambiguities in Bonnard’s practice problematize these attempts to read his paintings using modernist tropes. In particular, his depiction of his wife Marthe Bonnard in the bathtub does not fit easily within the genre of ‘the bather’. Across the Bonnard literature there has been the occultation of a specific woman (Marthe), replacing her with the Ophelia stereotype through an extension of Toril Moi’s ‘death dealing’ binarism. As a consequence of reiterated speculation regarding Marthe’s mental health she continues to be characterized as the neurotic woman disintegrating in the bath/sarcophagus. This article argues that the Bonnard literature creates a deathly and deadly porous woman. Reviewing the weight of gendered metaphoric language the article will offer a reading of the bath series and Bonnard’s late interiors based on the recognition of his difference – a difference that ruptures genre.
This research was highlighted in De Witte Raaf, a professional Magazine that takes a problem-oriented and critical approach to the Visual Arts in the Netherlands and Flanders (Schoof, K. 2019)
- Author contribution statement
- -
- Non-English
- No
- English abstract
- -