
Toulouse-Lautrec — At the Moulin Rouge
Toulouse-Lautrec (1892)Toulouse-Lautrec captured Paris nightlife at the Moulin Rouge cabaret. Figures crowd around tables in the famous dance hall, illuminated by harsh electric light. Preponderance of the Small (Xiao Guo) concerns attending to minor matters—the painting documents fleeting social moments and marginal figures rather than grand historical events.
Practical Integration
Harsh electric light floods the Moulin Rouge's interior, illuminating pale faces crowded around tables. Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec painted this scene in 1892, documenting Paris nightlife's marginal figures—the cabaret dancer, the absinthe drinker, the ghostly woman in the foreground whose greenish face suggests illness or intoxication. These are not the grand subjects of history painting but the small dramas of entertainment districts, fleeting social moments in artificial light. The composition cuts figures at odd angles, capturing fragments rather than monumental wholes. Toulouse-Lautrec embodies Xiao Guo (小過), Preponderance of the Small—Thunder above Mountain, Zhen over Gen. Movement restrained by stillness, arousing energy meeting immovable mass. The line structure shows strong yang at center with yin dominating outer positions, suggesting that small or yielding forces gain unusual prominence while great matters must wait. The character 小過 literally means \"small exceeding,\" indicating minor concerns taking disproportionate attention. Not the emperor's court but the cabaret hall, not eternal truths but passing entertainments. Zhou Dynasty diviners saw this configuration when circumstances favored modesty over assertion, when marginal matters required careful tending, when the small became temporarily central. Toulouse-Lautrec captured Paris nightlife at the Moulin Rouge cabaret. Figures crowd around tables in the famous dance hall, illuminated by harsh electric light. Preponderance of the Small (Xiao Guo) concerns attending to minor matters—the painting documents fleeting social moments and marginal figures rather than grand historical events. The Judgment addresses Toulouse-Lautrec's subject matter: \"Preponderance of the Small. Success. Perseverance furthers. Small things may be done; great things should not be done. The flying bird brings the message: It is not well to strive upward, it is well to remain below. Great good fortune.\" The cabaret is precisely this—earthward attention, small pleasures, moments that pass without historical weight. Ancient texts describe a bird that should not fly too high, focusing instead on immediate, practical concerns. In divination, Xiao Guo appeared when grand undertakings must yield to modest maintenance. The Image Text offers counsel the painter might recognize: \"Thunder on the mountain: the image of Preponderance of the Small. Thus in his conduct the superior one gives preponderance to reverence. In bereavement he gives preponderance to grief. In his expenditures he gives preponderance to thrift.\" This is not a moment for transformation but for exceptional attention to minor courtesies, mundane details. In the I-Ching sequence, Xiao Guo follows Inner Truth—after sincere judgment comes acceptance that some periods favor small over great, the marginal over the monumental.
References & Citations
- At the Moulin Rouge — Toulouse-Lautrec-1892. Toulouse-Lautrec captured Paris nightlife at the Moulin Rouge cabaret. Figures crowd around tables in the famous dance hall, illuminated by harsh electric light. Preponderance of the Small (Xiao Guo) concerns attending to minor matters—the painting documents fleeting social moments and marginal figures rather than grand historical events.