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Camille Pissarro
France, 1830-1903
Bergère rentrant des moutons (Shepherdess Bringing
in Sheep), 1886
Oil on canvas
17 x 14 1/2 in.
The Aaron M. and Clara Weitzenhoffer Collection, 2000 |
In the studio of Armand Guillaumin in
1885, Camille Pissarro met Paul Signac, who in turn introduced Pissarro
to Georges Seurat (1859-1891). Signac and Seurat were interested
in developing a new, scientific approach to painting which was based
on the rules of color-contrasts as laid out by Eugène Chevreul,
the American Ogden Rood, and others. Pissarro, the oldest of the
Impressionists, had been questioning the tenets of Impressionism
and banded with these young avant-garde painters to form a new movement,
with Seurat as its leader, which would soon be labelled Neo-Impressionism.
At the eighth and final Impressionist exhibition, held in 1886the
year of the present workthe Neo-Impressionists exhibited together
in a separate room. (The centerpiece of this room was Seurats
famous Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte,
now at the Art Institute of Chicago.)
In a letter to his dealer, Pissarro summarized
the goals of Neo-Impressionism, which is characterized by the technique
of Pointillism: "To seek a modern synthesis of methods based
on science... To substitute optical mixture for mixture of pigments.
In other words: the breaking up of tones into their constituents.
For optical mixture stirs up more intense luminosities than does
mixture of pigments." Thus, in separating color into its basic
components of small brushstrokes (or dots), and juxtaposing them
with their complements, the Neo-Impressionists hoped that their
paintings would achieve greater brilliance. Neo-Impressionism also
sought to replace the spontaneity of Impressionism with a greater
sense of permanence.
The present work is an early example of
Pissarro's practice of Neo-Impressionismnote the many flecks
(and larger blocks) of contrasting colors. Neo-Impressionism would
interest the artist for the next few years, even though his works
rarely display a pure form of Pointillism. Compare, for example,
Bergère rentrant des moutons with Signac's Coast
Scene.
A charcoal sketch for this painting
is owned by the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Before his conversion
to Neo-Impressionism, Pissarro had depicted the same farm buildings,
near his home in Eragny-sur-Epte in Normandy.
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