- By the Seashore
By the Seashore is a painting of
Pierre-Auguste Renoir executed in 1883 and now housed in theMetropolitan Museum of Art inNew York City . Late in the summer of1883 , Renoir spent about a month inSt. Peter Port , the capital ofGuernsey , and admired the rocks, cliffs and stunning view ofMoulin Huet Bay in St. Martin. He painted the starts of fifteen pictures during his stay, most of which were finished later in hisParis studio. Guernsey lies 48km off the coast of mainland Normandy. Both share the same geology and Guernsey fulfills the "by the sea" criterion in the exhibition title.The arc of the sitter's dark eyebrows and saucily tilted nose in that pleasant, rosy-cheeked face are common to works by Renoir. The woman in "By the Seashore" is almost certainly
Aline Victorine Charigot (1859-1915), his frequent model, then-girlfriend and the future Madame Renoir. She had accompanied him on this particular trip, one of many that Renoir undertook at this time in his life. He was undergoing an artistic crisis, trying to reconcile the desirable elements of light and color he had gained fromImpressionism with what he perceived as its undisciplined execution. This aesthetic battle being fought in Renoir's Guernsey scenes from 1883 is evident. His human figures in this series are either (1) carefully, almost classically rendered or (2) loose to the point of abstraction. Aline here looks as realistically fetching as any young woman could through the eyes of her artist lover, and much of the rattan wrapping on her chair is equally visible. Yet the background scenery is highly Impressionistic.
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