GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Although Pierre-Auguste Renoir is often considered a figure painter, the landscapes he painted in the 1860s and 1870s were daringly experimental. In The Seine at Châtou, he fills nearly the entire canvas with water and sky. A narrow band of land forms the horizon line, behind a railway bridge in the middle distance. The intricate, almost nervous brushwork that dominates the painting was characteristic of Renoir's technique in the 1870s, and was also frequently reviled by impressionism's early critics. Renoir did not exhibit his landscapes at the Salon or in the earliest impressionist exhibitions. He only began to show them publicly in 1877, at the third impressionist exhibition, at which he exhibited five landscapes.
Excerpt from
Heather MacDonald, DMA label copy, 2015.
NOTES
Created in 1874
Richard Brettell, Impressionist Paintings, Drawings, and Sculpture from the Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas Museum of Art, 1995), 57.
The Seine at Châtou is among the finest, boldest, and best preserved of Renoir's landscapes from the first half of the 1870s. Although Renoir is known to have worked in Argenteuil with Monet during the summers of 1873 and 1874, when this work was painted, writers have used the railroad bridge to identify its site as the nearby village of Châtou, where Renoir painted frequently throughout the 1870s and early 1880s.
When one compares this work to the most technically and compositionally advanced paintings by Monet, Sisley, or Pissarro from the same years, Renoir's landscape becomes even bolder. Virtually its entire surface is devoted to "unstable" elements, either water or sky, and as if this visual instability were not enough, Renoir refused the viewer even a strip of path or slip of river bank on which to stand. As a result, we become disembodied, floating viewers whose eyes are forced to wander across the water, looking for admission to this otherwise pleasant summer scene. This sense of distancing and instability is strengthened by Renoir's omission of all human figures from his landscape.
Perhaps because Renoir was known even to his friends and contemporaries as a figure painter, he allowed himself free rein when he painted landscapes. They therefore have a force and originality of conception that place them on the level of Delacroix's landscapes of a generation earlier. This modest but important example was acquired from the painter by the greatest dealer of impressionist painting, Paul Durand-Ruel, in 1891 and sold to an amateur collector in Le Havre in 1900. Renoir himself was shy about his landscapes and refused to exhibit any in the impressionist exhibitions of 1874 and 1876. He relented only in 1877, when he showed five landscapes. This painting evidently was never exhibited in the 19th century and, perhaps for that reason, is not as well known as it deserves to be.
Not sure of source:
Virtually the entire surface of this landscape is devoted to "unstable" elements, either water or sky, and as if this visual instability were not enough, Renoir refused the viewer even a strip of path or slip of river bank on which to stand. As a result, we become disembodied, floating viewers whose eyes are forced to wander across the water, looking for admission to this otherwise pleasant summer scene. This sense of distancing and instability is strengthened by Renoir's omission of all human figures from his landscape.
This modest but important example of Renoir’s landscapes, a departure from his usual figural paintings, was acquired from the painter by the greatest dealer of impressionist painting, Paul Durand-Ruel, in 1891 and sold to an amateur collector in Le Havre in 1900. Renoir himself was shy about his landscapes and refused to exhibit any in the impressionist exhibitions of 1874 and 1876. He relented only in 1877, when he showed five landscapes. This painting evidently was never exhibited in the 19th century and, perhaps for that reason, is not as well known as it deserves to be.
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Depicted location: Seine River (France): TGN: 7009707
Depicted location and place of origin: Châtou (inhabited place/France): TGN: 7009033
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- The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York~Read a biography of Pierre-Auguste Renoir from the Met.
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General Description
Although Pierre-Auguste Renoir is often considered a figure painter, the landscapes he painted in the 1860s and 1870s were daringly experimental. In The Seine at Châtou, he fills nearly the entire canvas with water and sky. A narrow band of land forms the horizon line, behind a railway bridge in the middle distance. The intricate, almost nervous brushwork that dominates the painting was characteristic of Renoir's technique in the 1870s, and was also frequently reviled by impressionism's early critics. Renoir did not exhibit his landscapes at the Salon or in the earliest impressionist exhibitions. He only began to show them publicly in 1877, at the third impressionist exhibition, at which he exhibited five landscapes.
Excerpt from
Heather MacDonald, DMA label copy, 2015.
Fun Facts
Archival Resources
Web Resources
Notes
Created in 1874
Richard Brettell, Impressionist Paintings, Drawings, and Sculpture from the Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas Museum of Art, 1995), 57.
The Seine at Châtou is among the finest, boldest, and best preserved of Renoir's landscapes from the first half of the 1870s. Although Renoir is known to have worked in Argenteuil with Monet during the summers of 1873 and 1874, when this work was painted, writers have used the railroad bridge to identify its site as the nearby village of Châtou, where Renoir painted frequently throughout the 1870s and early 1880s.
When one compares this work to the most technically and compositionally advanced paintings by Monet, Sisley, or Pissarro from the same years, Renoir's landscape becomes even bolder. Virtually its entire surface is devoted to "unstable" elements, either water or sky, and as if this visual instability were not enough, Renoir refused the viewer even a strip of path or slip of river bank on which to stand. As a result, we become disembodied, floating viewers whose eyes are forced to wander across the water, looking for admission to this otherwise pleasant summer scene. This sense of distancing and instability is strengthened by Renoir's omission of all human figures from his landscape.
Perhaps because Renoir was known even to his friends and contemporaries as a figure painter, he allowed himself free rein when he painted landscapes. They therefore have a force and originality of conception that place them on the level of Delacroix's landscapes of a generation earlier. This modest but important example was acquired from the painter by the greatest dealer of impressionist painting, Paul Durand-Ruel, in 1891 and sold to an amateur collector in Le Havre in 1900. Renoir himself was shy about his landscapes and refused to exhibit any in the impressionist exhibitions of 1874 and 1876. He relented only in 1877, when he showed five landscapes. This painting evidently was never exhibited in the 19th century and, perhaps for that reason, is not as well known as it deserves to be.
Not sure of source:
Virtually the entire surface of this landscape is devoted to "unstable" elements, either water or sky, and as if this visual instability were not enough, Renoir refused the viewer even a strip of path or slip of river bank on which to stand. As a result, we become disembodied, floating viewers whose eyes are forced to wander across the water, looking for admission to this otherwise pleasant summer scene. This sense of distancing and instability is strengthened by Renoir's omission of all human figures from his landscape.
This modest but important example of Renoir’s landscapes, a departure from his usual figural paintings, was acquired from the painter by the greatest dealer of impressionist painting, Paul Durand-Ruel, in 1891 and sold to an amateur collector in Le Havre in 1900. Renoir himself was shy about his landscapes and refused to exhibit any in the impressionist exhibitions of 1874 and 1876. He relented only in 1877, when he showed five landscapes. This painting evidently was never exhibited in the 19th century and, perhaps for that reason, is not as well known as it deserves to be.
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Cultures
Geography
Depicted location: Seine River (France): TGN: 7009707
Depicted location and place of origin: Châtou (inhabited place/France): TGN: 7009033
Process/materials
Historical periods
Individuals
Subject terms
RELATED OBJECTS
PROVENANCE
AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
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