THE PROPERTY OF A EUROPEAN COLLECTOR
Alfred Sisley (1839-1899)

La Seine à Grenelle - temps de pluie

Details
Alfred Sisley (1839-1899)
La Seine à Grenelle - temps de pluie
signed 'Sisley' (lower left)
oil on canvas
19¾ x 24in. (50 x 61cm.)
Painted in 1878
Provenance
Durand-Ruel, by whom purchased from the Artist on 26 January 1884 (379).
Jean d'Alayer, Paris.
Literature
F. Daulte, Alfred Sisley, Catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre peint, Lausanne, 1959, no. 289 (illustrated).
Exhibited
Paris, Musée des Arts décoratifs, Cinquante ans de peinture française, May-July 1925, no. 74.
Paris, Galeries Durand-Ruel, Sisley, Jan.-Feb. 1937, no. 16.
London, Marlborough Gallery, Pissarro-Sisley, June-July 1955, no. 40.

Lot Essay

In the 1870s Sisley discovered the barge port of Billancourt which was situated on the right bank of the river Seine on the south west side of Paris, opposite the Parc de Saint-Cloud. On the other side lay the Port de Grenelle, a small industrial development which daily saw the loading and unloading of barges and a broad, largely unpopulated river bank. Here Sisley discovered an ideal Impressionist setting with the bustle of late nineteenth-century industry, the romance of the riverside and large, dramatic skies reflected in the water.

He painted two notable views from the same point on the bank, the present picture and its sister piece now housed in the Denver Art Museum (fig. 1). Like Monet, in the late 1870s Sisley became interested in capturing the same view in different light conditions and at various times of the day. He took this concept a stage further in the 1880s with his many views on the banks of the Seine at Saint-Mammès.

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