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Blog
"Mon Oncle"
October 23, 2008

Villa Arpel
I saw Jacques Tati’s “Mon Oncle” (1958) the other night at the behest of my girlfriend/design partner Joan Michaels, who had seen it on cable a few nights before, and immediately rented it so she could show me the architecture, interiors, and furnishings. I had not seen the movie in years, and we watched it closely, oogling (and eventually Googling) the interiors and trying to guess who designed the furniture, lighting, and decorations. Focusing on the furniture, I came to realize a few things about the film:

Table with Jouve ceramic vase
Yes, it is a satiric send-up of modern technology and culture, a parable that opposes a modern world at once sleek, antiseptically clean, automated, superficial, and inhospitable with a traditional milieu that is spontaneous and convivial, if messy. And yes, Tati is a latter day Chaplin (or present-day Lucille Ball?), a French everyman whose bumblings expose the sterility, fatuousness, and pretension of modern machine civilization. But people who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones, and at least part of Tati occupies the modernist and strikingly beautiful Villa Arpel. And this is what Joan wanted me to see, and to write about.

Vista--staircase, fireplace, chair
Tati was born in 1907 and came of age during the 1920’s, the heyday of avant-garde modernism, the era in France of Mallet-Stevens and a young Le Corbusier. If you plainly see in “Mon Oncle” Tati’s nostalgia for a traditional, older world (which, incidentally, was not about to disappear soon in 1950’s France), you also see the formative artistic pull of modernism. The Villa Arpel reflects a sensibility weened on Le Corbusier—it is an iteration of the “machine for living in,” with its technical gadgets, its decorative asperity, and its conspicuous lack of comfort. But even in the 1920’s, the machine for living in was more a polemical construct than an actuality. By 1956, no one near the mainstream was seriously advocating living in a machine, nor was minimalism apropos to a decade of rampant consumerism. The Villa Arpel was hence an easy target for satire—a clay pigeon, really—and an idiosyncratic vehicle for a parable.

Yellow rocking chair
It was also an expression of Tati’s own artistic temperament. Tati was a mime with a mime’s economy of motion, gesture, and obviously, words. Minimalism is integral to this art form, and naturally extends to set design. It is not surprising, then, that the Villa Arpel is minimalist (“this is the vase”). What is surprising is how far beyond caricature Tati ventures. The Villa Arpel sets are brilliantly edited and meticulously executed, from the selection of furnishings, which include works by designers such as Guariche, Jouve, and Mategot, to the spare and elegant arrangements of the pieces, to the vivid accents of color visible in the furniture and clothing, to the outdoor landscaping. The vistas are visually exciting and photographically beautiful. Tati needed only to construct a target for his arrows; instead, he created a tour-de-force of mid-century modernism that looks as fresh today as it did fifty years ago, and still resonates as an abstract work of art. In its day, the Villa Arpel was copied by a fan as a residence; more recently, it has been the subject of museum exhibitions tracking Tati’s influence on modern design. In the end, the Villa Arpel was rendered with such aplomb and virtuosity, it was so clearly inspired, that it documents the undeniable joy, delight, and creative exuberance unleashed by avant-garde modernism, and this complicates the message of the film, or perhaps makes it a greater work of art.

Harper sofa with (assumably) Guariche lamp and Mategot/Jouve stand
Nowhere is Tati’s ambivalence toward modernism more apparent than with the furniture he designed (along with Jacques Lagrange, his longtime set designer) for the Villa Arpel. The three key pieces—the “Haricot” sofa (shaped like a bean), the rocking chair with the yellow seat, and the “Harper” sofa (think two tootsie rolls connected by a folded paper clip)—are designed to convey discomfort. At this they succeed, but again Tati goes further than needed. The rocking chair has a long seat and short back, forcing M. Arpel to slouch when seated, but this element creates an asymmetry that is visually exciting. The Haricot sofa looks impossible to lounge upon, and Hulot is forced to turn it on its side to sleep on it. Try this, though, and you will understand how much effort went into the design, which referenced both Perriand and Kiesler (the 1942 Peggy Guggenheim installation). The Harper sofa is shown with a woman perched rigidly on it, but it is the most beautiful of Tati’s designs—and one of the most striking sofas of the fifties—bridging the precision of the machine age and the sculptural presence of the mid-century (Lescaze meets Noguchi). One could even argue that these pieces rate highly as good design; they are visually excellent and suited to purpose, given that their purpose is to look uncomfortable. As a testament to their enduring appeal, all three designs were recently issued by Domeau & Peres in an edition of eight. Ironically, Tati anticipated not only the minimalism of the 1960’s but the limited-edition, not-for-comfort design/art of the present decade.

Plastac factory interior
The last word here goes to Joan, who noted both the timeless beauty of the Villa Arpel and the aesthetic appeal of the Plastac factory, with its abstract signage, its frosted glass doors, its chrome furniture, and its “beautiful hues of gray.” Joan caught the essence of Tati here: he sees modernism not in terms of black and white, but rather as a beautiful shade of gray.
Posted by Larry Weinberg on October 23, 2008 | Comments (5)
Reader Comments
at 10/29/2008 10:44:47 AM, jayne michaels commented:
Elegant and timeless. Tati was a master on so many different levels. Priceless images. Should be in a museum.
On another note. Several people have tried to leave comments but something seems to be wrong with the system. Please investigate.
at 12/30/2008 11:19:21 AM, Peter commented:
Yes, Tati's modernist film sets were stunning. But perhaps that is the real message here: beauty is cold and empty when it is abstracted and divorced from body and soul. Human nature is messy and unpredictable, not unlike the dogs that seem to symbolize the flip side of the antiseptic Villa Arpel.
at 6/18/2009 10:25:51 PM, Zabern Hugues commented:
In the villa Arpel, the Lampadaire is not a Guariche but a "Type 600 from Rico & Rosemarie Baltensweiler 1953
at 11/7/2009 8:44:58 PM, Deoscuro commented:
The joke still seems lost on designers and architects. The point is, it doesn't matter if the sofas are of a "good" design, if they inheretably useless. And what Tati mocks in his films are not the beauty of design, but the uselessness of bad design that happens to look good.
Philip Johnsons "Glass House", Mies van der Rohes "Barcelona Pavillion" and LeCorbusiers "Villa Savoy" are not "machines to be lived in", but three-dimensional sculptures, to walk around, and to be seen in. Those houses are not sustainable homes, but display cases for a lifestyle. The Arpel House in Mon Oncle is likewise a house not to live in, but a showcase for display, or entertain.
Take any designer/architect magazine of today, and show a random interior. I bet it will be neo-modernistic, showing an uptight and even asketic lifestyle, where every thing has its place. Move something from its intended place, and it will be messy. Those houses are not homes, but display cases. Homes can be lived in, those can not sustain life. Besides that the colors and furniture will have changed, the feeling of being in a house for the Arpels will stay the same. Though this time, in the 21st century. And the jokes are still on you.
at 11/8/2009 12:32:36 AM, elizabethmi@gmail.com commented:
To Deoscuro
You're the one who seems uptight. Can't you see the beauty in what Tati created? He chose visually stunning pieces for Mon Oncle. The furniture you describe as bad design are highly collectable. They've stood the test of time, they still look fresh and vibrant. . To state that Philip Johnson's Glass House along with the other masterworks are show cases not to be lived in is naive. You obviously are not a visual person.
We're extremely lucky that Tati was.



















