Les Baigneuses is an oil painting on canvas with dimensions 105 x 171 cm (41.3 by 67.3 inches), signed Albert Gleizes and dated 1912, lower left. This work, painted at the outset of 1912, represents a series of naked elegant women at various points in the landscape foreground, their reflections along with the blue of the sky echoing off the water at the lower edge of the canvas. Beyond the bathers can be observed protruding rock-like formations or boulders—with highlights of
primary color—that appear to espouse elements of the foreground. Above these cliffs are found several
deciduous woody plants of the genus
Populus. Though native to many areas of the
Northern Hemisphere, the Poplar, with its fastigiate branches tapered towards the top, is especially iconic of the western suburbs of Paris (
la banlieue ouest) where Gleizes lived, 24 Avenue Gambetta,
Courbevoie. The Gleizes family moved to Avenue Gambetta in 1887. Towards the end of the 19th century and extending through the early 20th century, Courbevoie witnessed a rapid growth in population, and a surge in the development of crafts, industry and transport (including rail). Such a scene of naked bathers actually occurring would have been highly unlikely in Courbevoie, or anywhere else near the Parisian capital.
Optimistic reconciliation Les Baigneuses—as
Robert Delaunay's 1912
City of Paris, and to some extent
Jean Metzinger's 1913
Meudon Landscape—juxtaposes sharply contrasting elements. On the one hand the artist includes elements from a society in the process of inexorable industrialization, and on the other, the sereneness of timeless classical nude figures (something rarely painted by Gleizes, as Brooke points out). Yet the relationships between the two are formally resolved. This aspect of simultaneity—the optimistic reconciliation of classical tradition and contemporary life—was of particular interest to Gleizes, as it was to the
Section d'Or group of Cubists (also known as the Passy group, or Puteaux group). The background forms a semi-urban landscape that possesses both rural and semi-industrial components, consistent with Courbevoie of the 1910s (except perhaps for the rock-like outcrops), a village or town with delicate smokestacks or factory chimneys billowing smoke that blends into the cloudy sky. Evidence that factories were already located on the Seine can be seen in Gleizes'
Péniches et fumées à Courbevoie of 1908. The statuesque nudes themselves are highly stylized, divided into geometrized facets, planes and curves, yet they are graceful, balletic and elegant. The source of light, rather than beaming down from one particular direction, appears to emanate from within the canvas itself, with an intensification in the vicinity of the bathers. , postcard ca.1912, Les Bord de Seine, L'Ile de la Jatte (right). The
Île de la Jatte (or Île de la Grande Jatte) is an island over which Gleizes would have passed on his way to and from the center of Paris. The island is well known as the setting for
Georges Seurat's
A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte (1884), and his
Bathers at Asnières, in the background of which smoke emanating from industrial factories of
Clichy can be observed; just as in Gleizes'
Baigneuses Gleizes painted
L'île de la Jatte many times since 1901 and on at least five occasions between 1907 and 1912: • 1907–1909, ''L'île de la Grande Jatte ou Bord de parc avec rivière animée de canots'', pastel pierre noire and ink on bistre paper, , private collection • 1908,
Péniches et fumées à Courbevoie, Crayon, ink and gouache on paper, 23 x 32.5 cm, Fondation Albert Gleizes (Paris) • 1908, ''L'île de la Grande Jatte'', fusain and gouache on rose paper, ,
Musée national d'art moderne (Paris) • 1908,
La Seine près de Courbevoie, oil on canvas, ,
Musée Roybet Fould (Courbevoie) • 1908,
Barque à Courbevoie, fusain and chalk on paper, 30 x 38 cm, art market (Paris) The subject matter of
Les Baigneuses, much as that of his monumental
Harvest Threshing of the same year, is derived from an unsentimental observation of the world. Gleizes' interest centered on many things in the years leading up to 1912, one of which was the dynamic qualities of modern urban life.
Les Baigneuses, depicts "a harmonious and balanced landscape in which industrial and urban elements are imbricated with the surrounding countryside;" writes Cottington in
Cubism in the Shadow of War, "Poussinesque in its organizing geometry and Claudian in its specificity of place, this is the landscape not of Arcadia but of France as Gleizes wished it to be." Gleizes' formal innovations seen in this work are more closely related to the Salon Cubists (
Jean Metzinger,
Robert Delaunay,
Henri Le Fauconnier and
Fernand Léger) than to those of the Gallery Cubists (
Pablo Picasso and
Georges Braque). The gestures of the bathers in the 'foreground' and the whirls of chimney-smoke in the 'background' are unified expressively through "a timeless and purportedly natural order." While the subject was "explicit in its reference to latinist classicism" writes Cottington, "and implicit in its rejection of the avant-gardist challenge of the
futurists to avoid the pictorial representation of the nude as inescapably
passé", he continues, "the presence of emblems of industrialization, not juxtaposed but integrated with the rhythms of the landscape, marked a definite, if tentative, departure from the concerns he had shared with Le Fauconnier." Gleizes made use of fragmentation of form, multiple perspective views (i.e., mobile and dynamic, rather than static and from one point-of-view) along with linear and planar structural qualities. Though highly sophisticated in theory, this aspect of simultaneity would actually become quite commonly employed within the practices of the
Section d'Or group. Gleizes deployed these techniques in
"a radical, personal and coherent manner" (Cottington, 1998). ==1912==