Details
Emile Claus (1849-1924)

Waterloo Bridge and Hungerford Bridge with the Houses of Parliament
beyond

signed and dated lower right Emile Claus, London 16,
oil on canvas
27½ x 27½in. (70 x 70cm.)

Painted in London in 1916

Lot Essay

At the outbreak of war in 1914 many Belgian artists sought refuge in England. Along with the younger painters of the Laethem St Martin School, the older luministe artist Emile Claus came to England. Unlike his younger countrymen who moved to Wales and the West country Claus preferred to stay in the more cosmopolitan London. His chief subject matter during the war years was the River Thames and the boats and ships docking in the Port of London. The present work looking over the Thames Bridge from the Temple Embankment is reminiscent in positioning to the many views that Claude Monet painted of London from the Savoy Hotel at the turn of the century and that Derain had painted during his short visit in 1906.

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