Félix Vallotton

The Protest

1893
woodcut

SEE IT IN PERSON

Not currently on view

In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026

View at clevelandart.orgPlan a visit ↗

Discussion

FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG

Inspired by the flat space, tipped perspective, and use of pattern in Japanese color woodcuts, Vallotton exploited the contrast of rich black ink and the white of the paper for a dynamic image of a mass of figures surging forward as the police break up a political demonstration. Vallatton frequently focused on social issues, especially during the 1890s when street riots were common in Paris. The blankness of the lower-right corner of the print—fully one-third of its surface area—is a bold and original concept. As a terrified crowd rushes away from the authorities, Vallotton mitigated criticism of police violence with comic touches: the man who pauses to try to grab his top hat or the corpulent waddle of the figure with an umbrella. Many would imitate his woodcut style, but few could approach the sophistication of his artistic vision.

Source ↗

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Sign in to join the discussion.

Community guidelines

More by Félix Vallotton

Corn FieldsCorn FieldsThe BistroThe BistroThe ExitThe ExitThe question is, not whether...The question is, not whether...Ten past one...Ten past one...Bon MarchéBon MarchéSalute first...Salute first...You can bawl...You can bawl...

More like this

The AccidentFélix Edouard Vallotton — The AccidentOff to the JugFélix Edouard Vallotton — Off to the JugFrontispiece to Paris IntenseFélix Edouard Vallotton — Frontispiece to Paris IntensePrint FanciersFélix Edouard Vallotton — Print FanciersThe WinnerFélix Edouard Vallotton — The WinnerThe Coffin BearersFélix Edouard Vallotton — The Coffin BearersThe ShowerFélix Edouard Vallotton — The ShowerViennese Café: Carambole (Wiener Café: Carabol)Moriz Jung|Wiener Werkstätte — Viennese Café: Carambole (WieParading through the Streets in Single FileFélix Edouard Vallotton — Parading through the Streets in SiAu Pied de l'EchafaudHenri de Toulouse-Lautrec — Au Pied de l'EchafaudBox OfficeFélix Edouard Vallotton — Box OfficeSheepThéophile Alexandre Steinlen (Swiss, 1859–1923) — Sheep