The Absinth Drinker

Public Domain

Artist / maker

Leon Spilliaert (draftsmen (artists))

Date

1907

Period

20th century
Léon Spilliaert painted La Buveuse d’absinthe (The Absinth Drinker) in 1907, during the most creative period of his career, between 1899 and 1912. It was after returning to Ostend, his native town, in 1904, following a brief stay in Paris, that Spilliaert made his famous series of fifteen self-portraits, in which solitude and psychological conflict are depicted in a highly…
Read more
Léon Spilliaert painted La Buveuse d’absinthe (The Absinth Drinker) in 1907, during the most creative period of his career, between 1899 and 1912. It was after returning to Ostend, his native town, in 1904, following a brief stay in Paris, that Spilliaert made his famous series of fifteen self-portraits, in which solitude and psychological conflict are depicted in a highly personal manner. Stylistically La Buveuse d’absinthe falls into this series of paintings. Contrary to habit, Spilliaert painted a frontal view of the woman, probably because he was struck by her hallucinatory state. The result is a rather mortifying portrait that shows the destructive power of addiction on a young socialite, a habituée of Ostend nightlife. The work sets itself apart from most of the self-portraits through the extreme stylisation of the physiognomy of the face. What stands out most are the model’s dilated pupils in the sunken blackness of her eye sockets. The way in which the model is framed is another unusual aspect of the painting. The subject fills practically the whole pictorial space, making any reference to time or space impossible. The singularity of the work also comes from the harmony between palette and technique. The typical alternation of light and dark is combined with flat colours and parts that are painted and drawn. It is this perfect interaction between colour and technique and between shape and background that gives La Buveuse d’absinthe its intense and timeless atmosphere.
Read less

More about this work

Vlaamse Kunstcollectie - EN

Your browser does not meet the minimum requirements to view this website. The browsers below are compatible. If you do not have one of these browsers, click on the icon to download the preferred browser.