His mother called him "Wild Thing!" and Max said "I'LL EAT YOU UP!" so he was sent to bed without eating anything. That very night in Max's room a forest grew And grew. And grew until his ceiling hung with vines and the walls became the world all around.



Posted by anothersam at September 27, 2008 12:56 AM. 2 Comments
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I'm working from memory here. No images or primary text is readily on hand. With that said:
Originally (c. 1775), the Salle à manger in the Hameau at Chantilly was decorated like a forest, that is, the walls were painted like a glade of trees. The vault over the room looked like it was formed by arcing tree limbs. Think arbortecture. The floor is made of grass, and the furniture were "naturalized." The path running through the garden even continues inside the cottage through the entrance. For all intents and purposes, the interior was made to look like the outdoors: an inverse relationship between landscape and architecture, whereby the landscape doesn't so much contain architecture but is rather contained by it. Dining inside, meanwhile, may be more accurately described as picnicking outside.
But don't mistake the Salle à manger to be similar to Sendak's (landscape) architecture of fantasy. Like much of the salons of the Ancien Regime, they were sites of intense social engagements, where any minor infractions in etiquette could exile you from your peers.
Alexander -
Sendacks landscape is one of an interior psychology rather than social etiquette.
It struck me that the bedroom transformed into the land of the Wild Things might not only be Max's dream-scape. It's also a description of a psychological space. For example, we might interpret this transformation as a description of the hallucinatory mania induced by Max's behaviour as depicted in the frames before the bedroom-forestification.