Vuillard is most famous for indoor scenes such as this, which reveal the details of their subjects' lives in claustrophobic detail. Most of his 1890s output was small, domestic, and feminine as a result of the artist's corset-maker mother's heavy influence on his life. The physical, though not emotional, diminutiveness, of these early works dissatisfied Vuillard, who used his connections to spend the rest of his lengthy career focusing on large decorative panels. For these, he abandoned his distinctive style and moved to more conventional depictions of objects and space. Thus, the current artistic consensus is that his career peaked in his first decade, though he was active for more than forty years. As an eager young student, he had helped form
les Nabis, a group of progressive artists inspired by
Gauguin and the
Symbolists. They prioritized the abstract and decorative functions of shape and color. As he grew more conventional, Vuillard abandoned such visually engaging habits.
Location history The Seamstress has been on view in many locations, including
Le Barc de Boutteville of
Paris in 1893; the
McLellan Galleries in
Glasgow in 1920; the
Lefevre Gallery in
London in 1945; a traveling exhibition of Vuillard's intimate interiors that reached
Houston,
Washington, D.C., and
Brooklyn in 1989-1990; and a comprehensive retrospective arranged by the
National Gallery of Art in D.C., the
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the
Galeries nationales du Grand Palais in Paris, and the
Royal Academy of Arts in London in 2003-2004.
Acquisition The IMA acquired
The Seamstress in 1969 as a gift of
Blanche Stillson in memory of
Caroline Marmon Fesler. It has the acquisition number 69.68. It is currently on display in the Sidney and Kathy Taurel gallery. ==References==