Camille Pissarro (1830-1903)
PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT EUROPEAN FAMILY COLLECTION
Camille Pissarro (1830-1903)

Paysage avec deux personnages, Éragny, automne

Details
Camille Pissarro (1830-1903)
Paysage avec deux personnages, Éragny, automne
signed and dated 'C. Pissarro.1902' (lower left)
oil on silk laid down on board
10 3/4 x 8 1/2 in. (27.2 x 21.6 cm.)
Painted in 1902
Provenance
Private collection, Paris, acquired in the 1950s, and thence by descent; sale, Sotheby's, London, 9 February 2012, lot 389.
Acquired at the above sale by the present owners.
Literature
J. Pissarro & C. Durand-Ruel Snollaerts, Pissarro, Catalogue critique des peintures, vol. III, Paris, 2005, no. 1470, p. 892 (illustrated).
Exhibited
Paris, Espace Art et Patrimoine, Collection d'un amateur d'art, 1991.

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Lot Essay

Pissarro moved to Eragny-sur-Epte, a small village on the Paris-Dieppe road, in 1884. He wrote to his son Lucien, '"the house is superb. It's two hours from Paris; I've found the countryside more beautiful than Compiègne. Spring's beginning, the pastures are green, the distant silhouette's fine.' Working in an even more confined orbit than at Louceviennes or L'Hermitage, for almost two decades Pissarro chose the nearby meadows as the regular site for his contemplation of nature…The heavy paint surface and close values recall his paintings of the 1860s, although the textures are more varied and the colour range is more resonant. The apparent surrender to the rhythms and roughness of nature reminds us how considered and constructed the images of the meadows at Eragny are. For all their attention to the specific effet, these paintings place before us various fictions: of man subsumed by nature, of man composing nature, of man owning nature" (R. Thomson, Camille Pissarro, London, 1990, pp. 81-82 and 84).

Discussing these fine luminescent works of the Eragny period, Christopher Lloyd writes, "One of the more important aspects of this final period is the return to subject-matter traditionally associated with Impressionism. It is as if Pissarro was determined to reassess Impressionism. The rural paintings dating from [this period] retain a luminosity of texture that is derived from the close working of the surfaces of his neo-impressionist paintings. There is an intensity about these paintings that enriches them with an almost visionary quality" (C. Lloyd and A. Distel, Pissarro, exh. cat., Hayward Gallery, London, 1980, p. 134).

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