The Last Ripple of the Nabis
Paul Ranson was out of time. It was 1909 and the world was moving on to something harsher and louder. But in his final months he stayed focused on the curve of a woman’s head. This painting is the last gasp of a movement that wanted to turn life into a pattern.
The Nabis were never about the truth. They were about the feeling of a color or the weight of a line. Ranson pulled from Japanese woodblock prints to flatten the universe until only the essence remained. There is no air in this room. There is no distance between the viewer and the subject. There is only the rhythmic pulse of golden hair.
He died shortly after he finished this. He left behind a piece of work that felt more like a map than a portrait. The decorative patterns do not just sit there. They replace the very idea of space. Ranson was showing us that the soul is not found in the shadows of a three-dimensional room but in the flat planes of our own obsessions.
This was the peak of his craft. He turned hair into a landscape and a landscape into a symbol. It remained inside the tight circle of the Nabis for years because it was a secret language they all spoke. It was a goodbye letter written in flat zones of color. He did not need a perspective. He just needed to get the line right before the light went out.
References
Boyer, Guy. The Nabis and the Decorative Arts. Paris: Musee d'Orsay, 1993.
Frèches-Thory, Claire and Antoine Terrasse. The Nabis: Bonnard, Vuillard, and Their Circle. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1991.
Ranson, Paul. The Golden Head of Hair. 1909. Oil on canvas. Private Collection.