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.Bathing

The bath in mythology

The bath in mythology

Susanna and the Elders

Susanna and the Elders

The bath in the Latin world

The bath in the Latin world

Bathing in the Middle Ages

Bathing in the Middle Ages

The "dry wash"

The "dry wash"

Louis XIV's bathtub

Louis XIV's bathtub

The bath's return to favor

The bath's return to favor

Healthy body, healthy mind

Healthy body, healthy mind

The principles of hygiene

The principles of hygiene

The "bathing hit"

The "bathing hit"

Bathing is a pleasure

Bathing is a pleasure

Medieval steam rooms

Medieval steam rooms

The Garden of Delights

The Garden of Delights

Cover this breast which I cannot behold

Cover this breast which I cannot behold

Pleasure hidden beneath morality

Pleasure hidden beneath morality

The relaxation of moral standards

The relaxation of moral standards

The nude in the bath becomes realistic

The nude in the bath becomes realistic

The 20th century: La Dolce Vita

The 20th century: La Dolce Vita

The suicide of Seneca or the fatal bath

The suicide of Seneca or the fatal bath

The Assassination of Marat

The Assassination of Marat

"Enter now, Jean Moulin!"

"Enter now, Jean Moulin!"

The Masters of Suspense

The Masters of Suspense

Healthy body, healthy mind

In the 20th century, with the arrival of mains drainage and scientific progress, in particular the work of Pasteur on germs, the private bath and the shower (invented in the late 19th century as a faster, cheaper means of washing soldiers and prisoners) became standard.

Apartments in rental blocks were gradually converted to accommodate hole-in-the-ground toilets, showers and bathtubs. The bathroom or shower room became a place of private comfort and convenience.

Nude at her bath - Pierre Bonnard
Nude at her bath

Like Degas, Bonnard painted a lot of nudes in the bath. Sometimes he even photographed them. This nude at her bath is probably of Marthe, the painter's companion, who died in 1942. Bonnard uses an original, almost cinematographic high-angle viewpoint. From this position, he can capture both the subtlety of the light on Marthe's skin and the tiles, the bathmat, the clothes draped over the chair, the louvered shutters - and the delicately color-tinted whites of the bathtub and curtain. Bonnard often used this elevated viewpoint. Without actually telling a story, this composition suggests that woman is somehow born out of the water - and sometimes even she is still merged with it, as if she has not yet learned how to differentiate herself. So the bathtub appears as a kind of original place, Plato's chora in which forms materialize, or space, the matrix of Derrida.

Pierre Bonnard

Pierre Bonnard, born in Fontenay-aux-Roses in 1867, was initially part of the Nabi group, along with Vuillard, Vallotton and Maurice Denis. He had met Vuillard at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris where he went in 1888 after obtaining a law degree. He was fond of Japanese art which gave him an unusual conception of space, with off-center arrangements, no perspective and rich decorative motifs. He became a lawyer in 1890 and spent his time drawing his fellow lawyers in court. In 1893 he met Marthe, who became his model and companion. In the early 20th century he traveled, to Italy, Spain, Belgium and Holland. On his return, his art gradually moved away from the Nabi and his palette lightened. He painted a lot of nudes and developed a passionate interest in the play of light on the body. When he met Monet in 1912, he tried his hand at landscapes but very quickly restricted the space to a garden, an interior or a bathroom, the intimate places where he could combine the play of light on the skin with decorative motifs - flowers, plants, tiles, drapes, etc. He retired to the south of France where he kept company with Matisse and died at Canet in 1947.

© ADAGP, Photo CNAC/MNAM, Dist. RMN / Adam Rzepka