The Geometric Mystic
Charles Filiger did not paint to capture the world. He painted to escape it. While his contemporaries in the Pont-Aven School were chasing the light of the Breton coast, Filiger was retreating into a silent, internal monastery. He lived as a recluse in Brittany, dismantling the human form into the rigid precision of stained glass patterns. He was a man obsessed with the holy proportions of the past, using compasses and rulers to map out a path to the divine.
Recumbent Christ, created between 1892 and 1895, is a haunting collision of eras. Filiger takes the flat, golden backgrounds of Byzantine icons and infuses them with a crushing fin de siècle anxiety. This isn't just a religious image. It is a psychological portrait of a world rotting with decadence and desperate for a savior. The air in his studio was thick with incense and sea salt, a claustrophobic atmosphere that seeped into the cardboard.
The Kingmakers of the Parisian art market found him too strange to sell. He was too mystical for the secularists and too avant-garde for the church. Yet, he saw what others couldn't. Decades before the Surrealists claimed him as a pioneer, Filiger was already painting the subconscious. He treated the body of Christ not as flesh, but as a mathematical equation for grief. In an age of new technology like the X-ray and the cinema, Filiger chose to look backward to find the future. He died in 1928, leaving behind these small, glowing prayers that still feel like Gregorian chants played on a scratched gramophone.
References
Jaworska, Wladyslawa. Gauguin and the Pont-Aven School. New York Graphic Society, 1971.
Cassou, Jean. The Concise Encyclopedia of Symbolism. Chartwell Books, 1979.
Musée d'Orsay. Catalogue des peintures. Paris, 1990.