Camille Pissarro (1830-1903)
Property from the Collection of Herbert and Adele Klapper
Camille Pissarro (1830-1903)

Le Marché de Gisors, Grande-Rue

细节
Camille Pissarro (1830-1903)
Le Marché de Gisors, Grande-Rue
signed and dated ‘C. Pissarro 1885’ (lower left)
oil on canvas
18 ¼ x 15 in. (46.5 x 38.1 cm.)
Painted in 1885
来源
Anon. sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 20 February 1908, lot 36.
Hirsch collection, Paris; sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 7 December 1912, lot 35.
Dr. Albert C. Barnes, Merion, Pennsylvania (acquired at the above sale).
Galerie Durand-Ruel et Cie., Paris (probably acquired from the above, July 1919).
Léon & Gustave Bollag (Salon Bollag), Zürich (acquired from the above, 18 October 1923).
Yvon Helft, Paris.
Sam Salz, Inc., New York (acquired from the above, 26 November 1940).
Mervyn LeRoy, Los Angeles (acquired from the above, 21 August 1941).
Anon. sale, Nouveau Drouot, Paris, 27 June 1986, lot 18.
Anon. sale, Sotheby’s, London, 31 March 1987, lot 13.
Private collection, New York (acquired at the above sale); sale, Sotheby’s, New York, 7 May 1991, lot 7.
Acquired at the above sale by the late owners.
出版
L.R. Pissarro and L. Venturi, Camille Pissarro: Son artson œuvre, Paris, 1939, vol. I, p. 178, no. 690 (illustrated, vol. II, pl. 143).
R. Lloyd, The Art Bulletin of Victoria, Melbourne, 1985, pp. 21, 23 and 31, note 26 (illustrated, p. 21, fig. 7).
J. Pissarro and C. Durand-Ruel Snollaerts, Pissarro: Catalogue critique des peintures, Paris, 2005, vol. III, p. 534, no. 816 (illustrated in color).
R.R. Brettell, Pissaro's People, exh. cat., Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 2011, p. 220 (illustrated in color, fig. 166).
展览
New York, Beadleston Gallery, Inc., The Herbert J. & Adele Klapper Collection, May 2002, no. 19 (illustrated in color; detail illustrated in color on the frontispiece).
Roslyn Harbor, Nassau County Museum of Art, The Subject is Women: Impressionism & Post-Impressionism, January-February 2010, p. 11 (illustrated in color).

拍品专文

On Monday mornings, Camille Pissarro often joined his wife Julie and a couple of their children, with some household helpers, for the two-and-a-half-mile excursion from their home in Éragny to attend market day in Gisors, a town of about four thousand inhabitants further down the Epte River. While Julie stocked up on produce and provisions for the coming week, Pissarro sketched the many people from Gisors and nearby villages who gathered among the stalls set up on the Grand-Rue (today the rue de Vienne) near the town hall, as they engaged in selling, buying, or bartering, exchanging news, and socializing during this all-important, weekly communal event.
The simple human interaction in this pre-capitalist exchange of goods appealed to Pissarro’s life-long dedication to the fundamental principles of non-violent anarchist theory: egalitarianism, freedom from tyranny, the satisfaction derived from honest, unexploited labor, and a belief in the evolution of society toward a more peaceable and harmonious condition. From the drawn studies Pissarro elaborated a key theme in his later oeuvre—le marché, the market scene. He typically peopled these pictures with more figures in various postures than a viewer can readily count. The artist completed between 1880 and 1901 around three dozen gouaches and pastels of this kind, as well as numerous other works on paper, including prints.
The present Le Marché de Gisors is one of only five versions of this genre that Pissarro painted in oils on canvas; none is more than 32 inches (82 cm.) in height. Pissarro intended to market these socially-themed pictures to a wide public. In the hope of appealing to buyers of lesser means, who shied away from the prices dealers asked for large oil paintings, he valued these more modestly scaled scenes, in oil or gouache, at affordable levels.
The initial public appearance of the market subject in Pissarro’s work were three gouaches, painted in Pontoise, which the artist included in the Seventh Impressionist Exhibition, 1882. The present canvas, completed several years later, is the first of the three that Pissarro painted in Éragny, his final home (the others are Pissarro and Durand-Ruel Snollaerts, no. 1013 [1893] and no. 1097 [1895]). The figures in Pissarro’s market scenes are predominantly women, in important roles as both providers and consumers. The artist understood the powerful matriarchal impetus that still shaped agrarian society at that time, as it had in antiquity and prehistory as well.

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