Moulin de la Galette

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

  • oil on canvas
  • nightlife
  • oil painting
  • Post-Impressionism
  • oil paint (paint)
  • table
  • night
  • dance
  • nineteenth century
  • 19th century
  • painting techniques
  • painting (image making)
  • painting
  • painting
  • paint
  • canvas
  • paint
  • oil paintings (visual works)
  • french
  • painting
  • european painting
  • women
  • night scenes
  • leisure
  • dancers
  • men
  • urban life
  • Century of Progress
  • world's fairs
  • Chicago World's Fairs

1889

With this painting of the dance hall known as the Moulin de la Galette, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec established his reputation as the chronicler of the Montmartre district’s famed nightlife. A wooden barrier bisects the composition, dividing the frenzied action of the dance floor in the background from the stillness of the women waiting in the foreground. Toulouse-Lautrec used turpentine to thin his paint and applied it in loose washes, a technique known as peinture à l’essence. The result is a sketchy style that conveys both the immediacy of the artist’s observations and the tawdry atmosphere of his subject.