Luncheon of the Boating Party (21 page)

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Authors: Susan Vreeland

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BOOK: Luncheon of the Boating Party
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Jules Laforgue in his shirtsleeves was sitting at the desk behind stacks of manuscript pages puffing on his Dutch porcelain pipe. “No cast?”

“I’ve cast it in the rubbish.” He made a flamboyant gesture of tossing it aside.


Formidable!
If you want to see Charles, he’s working at home today.”


Ah, bien.
What are you working on?”

“An index to his book on Dürer.”

“As his personal secretary?”

“As his disciple, or so he fancies me. If it weren’t me, it would be someone else. His sense of identity needs that.”

“Indeed. I won’t interrupt. Rue Monceau, is it?”

“Yes, number seventeen. One more thing. I want you to know that you’re doing me a favor by letting me see the process.”

“The struggle to come, you mean.”


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S u s a n V r e e l a n d

.

.

.

A manservant in knee breeches and white hose answered Ephrussi’s door and ushered him past Monet’s
La Grenouillère
to Monsieur’s study.

Thank God Gustave didn’t go in for such costuming of hired help.

Charles, in a red silk Chinese kimono, stood up behind his desk.

“Auguste! Welcome! Jules said you were staying out in the country.”

“I am. At Chatou. For my new painting, which is why I’ve come to see you.”

“And I’ve wanted to see you too, to advise you to be cautious.”

“About my arm? It’s fine. See?” He picked up a pen from the marble stand on the desk, stretched out his arm, and pretended to write in the air.

Charles’s cheeks lifted in a brief, indulgent smile. “Impressive, but that’s not what I meant.”

Auguste replaced the pen next to a paperweight of an iridescent blue-winged insect caught in amber. The human condition, Pierre would call it.

“Tea?” Charles asked. “It’s Petrushka. Steeped and ready.”

Auguste nodded and Charles poured two glasses from the spigot of a silver samovar on a carved rosewood table. Behind it was an awful mythological fantasy framed in heavy gold baroque. By Moreau, no doubt. On the opposite wall, a series of pastels, Degas’ ballerinas exercising at the barre.

And between two windows, his own painting of Lise Tréhot. Seeing it after so long sucked the breath out of him. How much coaxing she’d needed to pose nude. He’d kept the painting for years as a remembrance of joyous love until need had forced him to sell it. Everywhere he went lately he ran smack up against his past. Such a tumble of remembrances.

Pierre would call them portents.

Charles held up a sugar cube in silver tongs. “One cube or two?”

“Two.”

He dropped them into the glasses in silver filigree holders and brought one on a tray. Auguste took it in his right hand. The glass chattered in the holder. He moved it to his left. It still chattered. He set it down.


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L u n c h e o n o f t h e B o a t i n g P a r t y

“Kousmichoff is the purveyor, by appointment to the Tzars. I have it sent from St. Petersburg. It’s Ceylon tea with cardamon, cloves, almonds, and rose. You’ll find it quite delightful.”

Auguste managed to get it to his lips without catastrophe, but it burned his tongue.

Charles gestured toward two armchairs upholstered in pale yellow brocade, and they sat. Auguste crossed his legs.

“You know, don’t you, that Degas has no patience with you and

Claude and Alfred Sisley returning to the Salon?”

“Ah, the self-proclaimed spokesman declaims in holier-than-thou tones.”

“Such a large painting as your
Déjeuner des canotiers
is surely a signal that it’s intended as a Salon work.”

“Jules told you about it?”

Charles nodded. “A dozen people?”

“Thirteen at the moment. That’s why I came to see you.”

Ephrussi’s face turned serious. “Thirteen won’t stand a chance with the Catholics on the Salon jury.”

“What’s worse, they’re around a table after a meal,” Auguste said.

“It will probably be unsalable anywhere unless I get a
quatorzième.

“It will be mocked in a cartoon. The press will be licking their chops.”

“I know, I know.
Again,
I’m telling you that’s why I’m here, to ask you to be in it.”

“Me?” Charles put up his hand in front of his face. “No, not me. You need another, though, or otherwise scrub one person out.”

“It would be better to have you. You’ll lend authority to it.”

“Jules says it’s as large as your
Bal au Moulin de la Galette.

“It’s intended as a tour de force. It’s intended—”

“For the Salon, which you know I approve of, but—”

“Yes, for the Salon. And I don’t want to just figure honorably, as they say in horse racing. I want to blow the whole stuffy Salon apart with an assimilation of styles they won’t dare deny is genius.” He had raised his voice. Now he held up his index finger and spoke slowly and


139

S u s a n V r e e l a n d

deliberately. “I want to prove that one can exhibit there
and
produce original paintings of
la vie moderne.
” He crossed his legs the other way.

“But you must be aware that if you do a painting this large, word will get around. It signals another Salon entry just when Edgar is on the verge of saying good riddance to you and to Claude and Alfred if you submit there.”

“So
they’ll
be excluded by Degas because
I’m
submitting to the Salon? That’s monstrous! Diabolical!” He shifted in his chair. “He’s bluffi ng.”

“Not so. He intends to fill your spots with his young Realists.”

“Like Raffaëlli, in love with ugliness. Under his brush, even the grass is sordid.”

“At the moment Degas is getting more favorable critical press than the rest of you combined, so it would behoove you to be cautious about any break with him. You could be criticized all the more.”

“Are you trying to talk me out of this painting altogether?”

“No. I just want—”

“If I were criticized for selling out to easy portraits, I’d deserve the censure. But I only want to do what seems to me good work, regardless of its destiny, and a large painting is what I can do now, when the light is right and I have no commissions in Paris.”

“No one is questioning your art.” Charles fl icked off a shred of tobacco on a lacquered Russian cigarette box on the table between them.

“It’s your politics, I mean the group’s politics, that concern me.”

Auguste waved his hand dismissively. “I have no politics. The world is big enough for all of us. I didn’t come here to debate about Raffaëlli.

I came to ask you to be in my painting. You’ll have a spot center back, next to Jules, your top hat silhouetted against open air. Or you and Madame Ephrussi together there. I know you like to spend Sundays with her, so spend them at Chatou.”

“Out of the question. To have her exposed to the riffraff of La Grenouillère?
That’s
monstrous.”

“It’s not at La Grenouillère. It’s at Maison Fournaise.”

“Not to mention exposing her to the crass eyes of the public scruti-


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L u n c h e o n o f t h e B o a t i n g P a r t y

nizing your painting. No. I prefer to keep Madame for my own eyes.

You’re from a different world, Auguste. You don’t understand the nice-ties required of people in our position.”

“You mean
you
are from a different world.”

Charles raised an eyebrow at that. “To sit for a portrait in one’s own home is one thing, but to be painted in that raucous environment, in a
genre
painting—”

“All right, all right. Not Madame, then, but you.” He leaned forward again and tapped his fingernail on Charles’s desk, once for each word—“I want you in the painting. It’s only right, after all you’ve done for me.”

“You’ve done studies already? An underdrawing to restrain your

colors?”

“No studies. I’m painting it directly on a blank canvas.”

“That may be enough to lure me out there, just to see what you’re up to. For your own sake, don’t let any critic see you do that, or see it at all until it’s finished. You’ll be labeled a sensualist seduced by color, a cha-otic painter.”

“I don’t care what they call me.”

“You care acutely.” He sipped his tea. “What’s your stand on Raf-faëlli?”

“Is your posing contingent on my stance?”

“To a degree.”

“That’s unfair of you, but I’ll tell you anyway.” Auguste tried his tea again, making him wait. Still too hot. “He wants us to expose misery.

He spouts lists of character types we should paint, with ragpickers at the top. He even mandates locations. Let him paint what he wants, but we left the academy because subject matter was imposed on us there.”

“He considers artists as social educators, and I commend him for that.”

“Fine. Fine. So will this painting contribute to a social education, by showing that we’re enjoying our lives again. At least most of us. His concern for tramps and ragpickers is all well and good, if he likes to wallow, but birds sing even when they’re hungry.”


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S u s a n V r e e l a n d

“Meaning?”

“Meaning that there’s a purpose for prettiness—to give joy. Besides, Raffaëlli is not an Impressionist.”

“Degas is committed to him.”

“Enough to risk the breakup of the group? I think not.”

“I think so.”

He could see by Charles’s pinched mouth that he meant it.

“Will you come to pose or are you afraid you’ll be seduced by color?

I might as well cut up the canvas to reuse the pieces if you don’t come.”

“I can’t say.”

“Gustave will be there. You can talk to
him
about Degas and Raffaëlli.”

Outside, Auguste passed two women without even a glance.

Prissy foreigner, protecting his good wife from wholesome riverside society, Auguste thought. No doubt he also protects her from the
comt-esse,
or the likes of the actress in green who looked back at his offi ce window. And to hang that dog of a Moreau painting! Charles was taken in because it has the color of gold in it. Moreau can’t even draw a foot.

But if Charles didn’t show up, he might have to consider Jeanne’s dandy, if he dared to come again. Auguste hawked and spat in the gutter. No, he wouldn’t. He would pose some ragpicker fi rst.

He dashed out in front of a carriage and was cursed by the driver.

Auguste cursed him back.

He knew where he had to go next, but Gustave’s two hundred and

fifty francs for
Sunset at Montmartre
was already depleted by yesterday’s posing fees, the doctor, his rent at Chatou. The rest ought to go to Père Tanguy.

When the bell jingled, Madame Tanguy teetered on a chair reaching for a box on an upper shelf. Auguste rushed to her.

“You shouldn’t be doing that. Here, let me.”

He offered her his right hand. She took it with a momentary look of distrust, and stepped down.


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L u n c h e o n o f t h e B o a t i n g P a r t y

“That box of palette knives marked
trowel,
” she said, pointing.

He reached it easily without the chair, helped her reach a few more things, and carried them to the counter.

“Where’s Julien?”

“At the café around the corner, but he’s shorter than I am. I have to fill this order and take it to the
bureau de poste
by two.”

“What do you notice about me?” He stood with his arms out,

palms up.

“That you have no money in your hands to give me.”

“Aha, but I do!” He made a broad circular gesture with his right arm and patted his breast pocket conspicuously. Grinning, he said,

“That’s why I came.”

She gave him a squinty-eyed look.

“Now, don’t pretend that you loathe me. I know it’s an act. I know it was you who slipped in that tube of Prussian blue.”

She pressed her lips together, trying to appear stern.

“And I want another one, quick, before he comes in. And fl ake

white, ultramarine, and cobalt.” He snapped a fifty-franc napoléon on the counter.

“Oh, là!”

“How much do I owe?”

She thumbed through a stack of papers tied with string. “If you see that Cézanne, tell him he owes us two thousand one hundred seventy-four francs.”

“Minus the paintings of his you have.”

“You owe a hundred and forty-one francs, eighty-eight centimes, plus twenty-one francs forty now.” She dropped a slim tube into his chest pocket.

He felt his shoulders drop. He had intended to stock up on colors he knew he would deplete soon, but that would have to wait. He had his models to pay again in three days.

“Will you take eighty for now, until I get more?” He laid out three ten-franc coins next to the napoléon. She slapped her hand down on them, stubby fi ngers splayed.


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S u s a n V r e e l a n d

“I guess that means yes.”

“I guess I’ll take what I can.”

He blew her a kiss. “You know, that blue dress looks lovely on you.

It brings out the color of your eyes.”

She shook her head, hands on her hips.
“Monsieur le Flatteur.”

“Have you enjoyed your
pâté de foie
Julien?”

He patted the contraband tube, then backed to the door waving both outstretched arms to his sides like a bird, trying not to smile.

“Ah! Your arm. No cast!”

“Bonne journée, Madame l’Observatrice.”

Down to thirty francs again. He headed toward Camille’s
crémerie.

Maybe she had some luck with the painting of the girls juggling oranges.

He opened the door and saw the wall bare. “Ha!”

Camille’s plump face spread wider in a doughy grin.

“Sold?”

She didn’t say yes or no. She just ladled out some
potage crème de lé-

gumes,
set it on a round table in front of him, and sat down opposite him.

“Eat.” She pointed to the bare wall with her thumb. “You have my daughter, Annette, to thank for that. The shoe shop girl. She ran into that clown Sagot outside the Cirque Fernando and told him she had a painting she knew he’d want. ‘By Renoir,’ she said with awe in her voice. ‘It’s of two circus performers.’ She dragged him here right then.

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