Musique de chambre (chamber music)
Aubusson tapestry woven by the Pinton workshop for the Compagnie des Arts Français.
1940.
A painter and engraver, Lucien Coutaud also worked in the theatre with Dullin, Barrault and designed numerous sets and costumes. However it was his encounter with Marie Cuttoli in 1933 which would introduce him to tapestry : she mainly commissioned seat cover designs. Most of the tapestries that followed were woven in the Pinton workshop for the Compagnie des Arts Français, whose main aim was to integrate tapestry as an element of interior decoration. The last 3 tapestries designed by the artist in 1960 are a tribute to his notoriety because “Jardins exotiques” was chosen to decorate the 1
st class saloon on the “France” transatlantic liner.Elements of his work as a set designer, influenced by surrealism, are discernible in Coutaud’s woven art : the world he illustrates is figurative yet stylised (shapes are angular and harsh) contained in a dream world often incorporating unusual borders.
‘Musique de chambre» seems a world away from the war’s grim times : the menacing sharp-edged designs of the later tapestries are not yet present but the artist's leitmotivs of onirism, beauty of the faces, and vegetal decoration on the borderes are already asserting themselves. A copy of the tapestry was included in the 1946 exhibition.
Bibliography :
L’amour de l’art, la tapisserie Française, 1946, ill. p.181
Collectif, Muraille et laine, éditions pierre Tisné, 1946, plate 55
Jean Lurçat, Tapisserie française, Bordas, 1947, plate 34
Exhibition catalogue Lucien Coutaud, œuvre tissé, Aubusson, Musée Départemental de la Tapisserie, 1988-1989, illustrated p 17