13470 Campus Drive Oakland,
CA 94619
phone: 510-777-9970 or 800-805-7060 fax: 510-777-9972 |
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Camille
Corot
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Title:
Souvenir de Toscane (Remembrance of Tuscany)
Medium: Etching
Image Size: 4 ¾" x 7" (12.1 x 17.8 cm)
Framed Size: 15" x 17" (38.1 x 43.1 cm)
Edition: From an edition of 750, this is a rare third
state impression.
Signed: Identifying information is engraved along the
lower margin of the plate.
SOLD
Illustrated:
1) Robaut, Alfred. L'ouevre de Corot Tome Quatrieme. 1905,
listed as number 3123.
2) Melot, Michel, Graphic Art of the Pre-Impressionists,
1980, listed as plate C. 1, image on page 35, discussion
on pages 257-258.
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Corot,
Jean Baptiste Camille (1796-1875)
After an apprenticeship
of five years in a drapery business, Corot studied painting
from 1822 to 1825, first under the painter Michallon,
then under the Classical landscape painter Victor Bertin,
and copying works by Joseph Verner and others, including
the 17th century Dutch masters. Convinced that "man can
only be an artist when he has recognized in himself a
strong passion for nature", he painted, or mostly sketched,
outdoors, working in the forest of Fontainebleau, at Dieppe,
Le Havre, Rouen and at Ville d' Avray where his father
owned a house. His first visit to Rome from 1825 to 1828,
which was to become decisive in his artistic development,
produced a number of oil-studies painted from nature,
views of historical Roman monuments and the scenery surrounding
Rome. They are of an unusual freshness, catching the light
and atmosphere of different times of the day with delightfully
subtle variations in tonal values. The actual paintings
based on these studies, for example, the "View of Narni"
(Ottawa, National Gallery of Canada, 1826), painted for
the 1827 Paris Salon, are in comparison rather formal,
in the manner of the New Classicism. On his return from
Italy, Corot worked in various parts of France. He also
visited Italy again (in 1834 and 1843), and went to Holland
(1854) and England (1862). His friendship in the late
1840s with the Barbizon painters Rosseau, Millet, Troyon
and Dupre greatly influenced his art. Around this time
he changed his style; his romantic-lyrical landscapes
("Paysages in times") interpret nature in her various
moods, and in the most delicate dull silver tones. His
landscapes had an inspiring influence on the Impressionists,
who wished to include him in their first Exhibition.
After an apprenticeship
of five years in a drapery business, Corot studied painting
from 1822 to 1825, first under the painter Michallon,
then under the Classical landscape painter Victor Bertin,
and copying works by Joseph Verner and others, including
the 17th century Dutch masters. Convinced that "man can
only be an artist when he has recognized in himself a
strong passion for nature", he painted, or mostly sketched,
outdoors, working in the forest of Fontainebleau, at Dieppe,
Le Havre, Rouen and at Ville d' Avray where his father
owned a house. His first visit to Rome from 1825 to 1828,
which was to become decisive in his artistic development,
produced a number of oil-studies painted from nature,
views of historical Roman monuments and the scenery surrounding
Rome. They are of an unusual freshness, catching the light
and atmosphere of different times of the day with delightfully
subtle variations in tonal values. The actual paintings
based on these studies, for example, the "View of Narni"
(Ottawa, National Gallery of Canada, 1826), painted for
the 1827 Paris Salon, are in comparison rather formal,
in the manner of the New Classicism.
On his return
from Italy, Corot worked in various parts of France. He
also visited Italy again (in 1834 and 1843), and went
to Holland (1854) and England (1862). His friendship in
the late 1840s with the Barbizon painters Rosseau, Millet,
Troyon and Dupre greatly influenced his art. Around this
time he changed his style; his romantic-lyrical landscapes
("Paysages in times") interpret nature in her various
moods, and in the most delicate dull silver tones. His
landscapes had an inspiring influence on the Impressionists,
who wished to include him in their first Exhibition.
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