Saturday, August 1, 2015

Arcachon

Édouard Manet
Interior at Arcachon
1871
Clark Art Institute

Manet painted his wife and son at Arcachon in 1871. Decades later both Matisse and Picasso would be obsessed by similar sea views through open windows. For them, as for Manet, interiors would be rendered as a series of flat planes with one or two intimate (flattened) inhabitants. The debt of 20th-century European painting to the French Impressionists of the 19th century was so great that Impressionism itself had to be convicted of excessive prettiness in order to reduce its oppressive weight. The chosen instances below (with the exception of the Toulouse-Lautrec photograph by Maurice Guibert) are preserved today at the Clark Art Institute.

Édouard Manet
Méry Laurent Wearing a Small Toque
1882
Clark Art Institute

Édouard Manet
Moss Roses in a Glass Vase
1882
Clark Art Institute

Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Self-portrait
c. 1875
Clark Art Institute

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Waiting
c. 1887
Clark Art Institute

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Carmen
c. 1884
Clark Art Institute 

Maurice Guibert (photographer)
Toulouses-Lautrec Painting Himself
c. 1891

Alfred Sisley
Banks of the Seine
c. 1880-81
Clark Art institute

Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot
Bathers of the Borromean Isles
c. 1865-70
Clark Art Institute

Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot
Road by the Water
c. 1865-70
Clark Art Institute

Camille Pissarro
Sunset
1891
Clark Art Institute

Claude Monet
Seascape with Approaching Storm
c. 1866
Clark Art institute