
"There is a formula, which fits painting perfectly," wrote Bonnard, "many little lies to create a great truth." The efflorescent explosion of colors in Nude in the Bath and Small Dog (1941-46) almost bars us from making any sense of the painting were it not for a few key recognizable objects--notably the dog and the bathtub, within which the details of the immersed figure of Marthe slowly appears. Bonnard places the figure frankly in the center of this fantastic scene. We witness the inanimate becoming animate as the bathtub mutates to adhere to Marthe's form: bulging to accommodate the bend of her right knee and expanding with the curve of her head. The walls seem to gently breathe like a living organism, warping in dazzling, undulating waves along with the ripples of the tub water.
Ostensibly the scene is serenity itself, yet Bonnard allows us no rest in front of it. Not only does the bathroom sway in our vision, the whole of it will not come into focus at once from any one position. We must move from side to side and back and forth. By thus "performing" the painting we are made all the more conscious of our movement in contrast to the stillness of Marthe's body. Marthe died in 1942, at age 72, before Bonnard had finished the painting.
©1998 The Museum of Modern Art, New York
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