Alfred Sisley (1839-1899)
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阿爾弗雷德.西斯利 (1839-1899)

往盧韋謝納的道路早晨景觀

細節
阿爾弗雷德.西斯利 (1839-1899)
往盧韋謝納的道路早晨景觀
簽名及日期:Sisley. 73. (右下)
油彩 畫布
15 x 21 7/8 吋 (38 x 55.5 公分)
1873年作
來源
1957年4月4日,巴黎木匠畫廊,拍品編號70 (作品名稱《La route, le matin》)
巴黎安德烈.維耶畫廊
巴黎施密特─羅斯柴爾德夫人 (1971年3月前)
瑞士私人收藏
瑞士私人收藏 (約1981年購自上述收藏)
出版
F. Daulte著 《Alfred Sisley, Catalogue raisonné de l’oeuvre peint》,洛桑,1959年,編號105,無頁數 (插圖)
展覽
1958年6月至7月 巴黎安德烈.維耶畫廊 「Chefs-d’oeuvre de collections particulières」展覽;編號40,無頁數
1971年2月至3月 巴黎杜蘭德.魯埃爾畫廊 「Sisley」展覽;編號16,無頁數 (插圖)
注意事項
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PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED PRIVATE COLLECTION

拍品專文

This winter scene was painted at Louveciennes, a picturesque suburban enclave about twenty kilometers west of Paris where Sisley lived from 1871 until 1875. With its willow-lined river banks and gently rolling hills, Louveciennes (along with the neighbouring towns of Bougival and Marly-le-Roi) had long attracted a sizable colony of writers and painters. In the 1830s, the painter Madame Vigée-Lebrun described being seduced 'by this spacious view that unfolds, as the eye follows the long course of the Seine, by the splendid woods at Marly and the delightful orchards, so well-tended you could believe yourself in the Promised Land; in short, by everything about Louveciennes, one of the most charming places on the outskirts of Paris' (quoted in R. Shone, Sisley, New York, 1992, p. 54). Yet it was the Impressionist painters above all who embraced the area around Louveciennes. By the time that Sisley moved there in 1871, Pissarro and Renoir were already settled in the vicinity, and Monet was staying nearby at Argenteuil. The landscapes that the four artists painted there from 1869 onward are often considered the first Impressionist pictures, and the region has been justly nicknamed the 'cradle of Impressionism' (R. Brettell, A Day in the Country: Impressionism and the French Landscape, exh. cat., Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1984, p. 79).

In the present painting, Sisley depicts a road at Louveciennes at dawn. The ground is snow-covered, the sky is a pale, silvery blue, the fields are rendered in subtly gradated tones of beige, blue and green, applied with a soft, square brush, and the composition is organized with rigorous precision. Describing Sisley's work from this period, Christopher Lloyd has written: 'The group of paintings by Sisley dating from the 1870s are subject to the strictest pictorial organization. It is this compositional aspect, in addition to their facture, that makes these pictures, in comparison with landscapes by artists of the Barbizon school, specifically modern. Sisley incorporates an almost relentless array of horizontals, verticals, and diagonals deployed as plunging perspectives and flat bands of planar divisions. The origins of such a style can be found in seventeenth-century French painting carried forward through Henri-Pierre Valenciennes to neo-classical landscape painting culminating in the Italian landscapes of Corot dating from the 1820s. Yet Sisley, moreso in many cases even than Pissarro and Monet, was more radical than any of his sources, since he seeks to bring order to a world in an ever increasing state of flux. The depiction of modernity was best served by a resolute style derived from astute visual analysis and confident technique' (Alfred Sisley, exh. cat., Royal Academy of Arts, London, 1992, pp. 14-16).

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