BONNARD, Pierre
French painter, lithographer and designer. He is known particularly for the decorative qualities of his paintings and his individual use of colour.
Initially, he studied law, but from 1886 he also attended the Académie Julian in Paris and subsequently the Écoée des Beaux-Arts. In 1889, he and his friends Maurice Denis, Paul Sérusier, Ker-Xavier Roussel, and Edouard Vuillard joined Paul Gauguin’s Nabis group of artists, whose works are generally grouped under Symbolism. After his first great success as an artist (a poster for France-Champagne in 1890), Bonnard gave up the law. From 1910, he lived alternately in various cities (mainly Paris) and rural regions of France (Dauphiné, Normandy), as the subject matter of his pictures shows.
In his painting, which comprises portraits, landscapes and still-lifes, Bonnard went back to Impressionism, which he extended by constructing his pictures in a completely new way and adopting a different palette. As a member of the Nabis group, Bonnard designed sets, costumes, and program vignettes for sundry French theatres and did illustrations for several periodicals, including La Revue Blanche. His lithographical works strongly influenced modern book graphics.