Lot Essay
Alberto Pasini is indeed the most celebrated among Italian Orientalists. At the beginning of the 1850s he left Italy for Paris where he met the artist Théodore Chassériau and through him, the diplomat Prosper Bourée, who was about to leave on an official mission to Persia. Pasini was invited to accompany Bourée as his personal painter and, in March 1855, he started his long trip to the Orient, which was to last a year and a half. In the course of this adverturous journey, the artist visited Egypt, Saudi Arabia, South Yemen and the Persian Gulf. He was commissioned by the Shah of Persia to execute numerous paintings. Pasini returned East in 1856 this time via the Black Sea and Constantinople and continued to travel returning to Constantinople in 1868-69.
Alberto Pasini painted this work on one of his trips to Constantinople, having left behind his friend and fellow painter, Jean-Léon Gérôme, who was ill at the time. The painting depicts an area outside Istanbul known for its fresh water where people would gather frequently to trade. Pasini was struck by the delicacy of the light in the East and here we typically see him exploring the contrasts between the deep shadow and the bright sun. He shows us in spectacular colour the charm of the Turkish women. Here they are seen gathered in small groups picnicing and gossiping in a relaxed and leisured enviroment. Their bright robes and headdresses are respectful and modest, a distinct contrast form the dancers, slave girls and harem scenes often shown in Orientalist paintings that were made for the western public.
Alberto Pasini painted this work on one of his trips to Constantinople, having left behind his friend and fellow painter, Jean-Léon Gérôme, who was ill at the time. The painting depicts an area outside Istanbul known for its fresh water where people would gather frequently to trade. Pasini was struck by the delicacy of the light in the East and here we typically see him exploring the contrasts between the deep shadow and the bright sun. He shows us in spectacular colour the charm of the Turkish women. Here they are seen gathered in small groups picnicing and gossiping in a relaxed and leisured enviroment. Their bright robes and headdresses are respectful and modest, a distinct contrast form the dancers, slave girls and harem scenes often shown in Orientalist paintings that were made for the western public.