拍品专文
'This is not a landscape painter, this is the very poet of the landscape, who breathes the sadnesses and joys of nature. The bond, the great bond that makes us the brothers of rooks and trees, he sees it; his figures, as poetic as his forests, are not strangers to the woodland that surrounds them. He knows more than anyone, he has discovered all the customs of boughs and leaves; and now that he is sure he will not distort their inner life, he can dispense with all servile imitation.' (Théodore de Banville, 'Le Salon de 1861', Revue fantaisiste 2, 1 July 1861, pp. 235-6.)
Recognition of Corot’s abilities as a leading landscape painter came not only from his patrons but also from his peers; Gauguin wrote 'Corot loved to dream, and in front of his paintings, I dream as well; and Van Gogh praised the 'quietness, mystery and peace’ of Corot’s landscapes (quoted in J. Leighton, 'After Corot' in Corot, exh. cat., The South Bank Centre, London, 1991, p. 30).
Corot also had a profound impact on a number of younger artists who eventually became members of the Impressionist movement; Berthe Morisot was his student for a period and Camille Pissarro described himself as a pupil in the Salon brochures. Corot's paintings were in great demand from collectors and dealers alike, and his studio was often crowded with critics, collectors, dealers and students who all clamoured to see him at work.
Pêcheur amarré sur la rive verte presents a harmonized blend of invented leitmotifs such as the boatman with his signature red cap to animate the composition and the overall composition being dominated by a mass of trees in the foreground. The composition is united by the gentle silvery glow of sun and like so many of Corot's poetic landscapes, can be viewed as a nostalgic homage to the artist's trips to Italy, and the time he spent around Lake Nemi in the Roman campagna. The present work is an exquisite example, not only of his innate ability to capture his local environs, but also of his ability to translate onto his canvas the atmospheric effects of any given time of day.
Recognition of Corot’s abilities as a leading landscape painter came not only from his patrons but also from his peers; Gauguin wrote 'Corot loved to dream, and in front of his paintings, I dream as well; and Van Gogh praised the 'quietness, mystery and peace’ of Corot’s landscapes (quoted in J. Leighton, 'After Corot' in Corot, exh. cat., The South Bank Centre, London, 1991, p. 30).
Corot also had a profound impact on a number of younger artists who eventually became members of the Impressionist movement; Berthe Morisot was his student for a period and Camille Pissarro described himself as a pupil in the Salon brochures. Corot's paintings were in great demand from collectors and dealers alike, and his studio was often crowded with critics, collectors, dealers and students who all clamoured to see him at work.
Pêcheur amarré sur la rive verte presents a harmonized blend of invented leitmotifs such as the boatman with his signature red cap to animate the composition and the overall composition being dominated by a mass of trees in the foreground. The composition is united by the gentle silvery glow of sun and like so many of Corot's poetic landscapes, can be viewed as a nostalgic homage to the artist's trips to Italy, and the time he spent around Lake Nemi in the Roman campagna. The present work is an exquisite example, not only of his innate ability to capture his local environs, but also of his ability to translate onto his canvas the atmospheric effects of any given time of day.