
![]() Room Guide: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Room 8
Room 8Interior LivesThe 1900sThis final room is dominated by Degas’s powerful Interior and Sickert’s Ennui. Both paintings evoke psychological states through the studied arrangement of figures in domestic interiors. Degas’s Interior has also been known as The Rape since the early twentieth century. But the subject is not clear. What is the relationship between the man and the woman? What is really going on in this dramatically lit bedroom? Sickert certainly knew this painting, and he must have had it in mind when he was preparing his memorable Ennui (‘boredom’). But again, we are left with unanswered questions. What is the relationship between these figures? What has taken place between them? Alongside contemporary works by Vuillard and Bonnard, Sickert’s Ennui shows the enduring legacy of Degas. The unsettling bleakness, sexual and psychological content, and narrative ambiguity of such paintings are unmistakably modern, suggesting new directions for art in the twentieth century. ‘doomed to live together yet without intimacy’ Emile Zola, Thérèse Raquin 1873
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