Friday, 21 March 2025

Gustave Caillebotte - part 5

c1889 Gustave Caillebotte self-portrait
Musée national des beaux-arts de Québec

Gustave Caillebotte was an influential French painter best known for his involvement in the Impressionist movement, though he also notably subscribed to a Realist aesthetic. The more naturalistic hues, neutral tones, and attention to perspectival space in his works set him apart from other Impressionist painters. As an artist familiar with Japanese prints, Caillebotte often mimicked the style of ukiyo-e artists by utilizing a tilted perspective to depict the stretching boulevards and river scenes of Paris, such as in Paris Street, Rainy Day (1877). Born on August 19, 1848 in Paris, France to a wealthy family, the artist went on to study painting first with Léon Joseph Florentine Bonnat and then at the École des Beaux-Arts. After Caillebotte inherited money from his parents, he was able to not only fund his own career but support Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Edgar Degas, Camille Pissaro and other artists by purchasing their work. Caillebotte’s work is in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Musée d’Orsay in Paris, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, among others. He died on February 21, 1894 in Gennevilliers, France.

For earlier works, and for more biographical information, see parts 1 - 4 also. 

This is part 5 of a 5-part series on the works of Gustave Caillebotte:

1884 La Villa Rose, Trouville
oil on canvas 60.1 x 73.5 cm

c1888 Sailboats in Argenteui
oil on canvas 65.5 x 55 cm
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

1888 The plain of Gennevilliers from the hills of Argenteuil
oil on canvas 65 x 81 cm
Private Collection

1888 Portrait of Eugene Lamy
oil on canvas 65.5 x 54 cm

1888 Laundry drying, Petit Gennevilliers
oil on canvas 54 x 65 cm
Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid

1888 Factories in Argenteuil
oil on canvas 65 x 82 cm
Private Collection

1889 Marine, Regatta at Villers
oil on canvas 73.4 x 200 cm

1889 Landscape in Argenteuil
oil on canvas 60 x 73 cm
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

1889-90 The little arm of the Seine, Argenteuil
oil on canvas 81 x 65 cm

c1890-91 Boat at anchor on the Seine at Argenteuil
oil on canvas 41.2 x 32.7 cm

1890-91 Garden path with dahlias in Petit Gennevilliers
oil on canvas 101 x 81 cm
Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid

1890 The bank the Seine at Petit-Gennevilliers
oil on canvas 153 x 127 cm
Private Collection

1890 Boats on the Seine at Argenteuil
oil on canvas 60 x 73 cm
Private Collection

c1891 Boat at anchor on the Seine at Argenteuil
oil on canvas 65 x 50 cm
Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid

1891 Willow on the banks of the Seine
oil on canvas (dimensions not found)
Private Collection

1891 The yellow boat
oil on canvas 73 x 92.5 cm
Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, CA

1891 The Seine at Marante Island in foggy weather
oil on canvas 65 x 54.3 cm

c1892 View of the Seine in the direction of the Pont de Bezons
oil on canvas (dimensions not found)
 Private Collection

c1892 Nasturtiums
oil on canvas (dimensions not found)
Private Collection

1892 The Seine at Argenteuil
oil on canvas 54.3 x 65.1 cm
The Clark Museum, Williamstown, MA

1892 Boats anchored on the Seine in Argenteuil
oil on canvas 60 x 73.7 cm
Museum Barberini, Potsdam

1893 White and yellow chrysanthemums
oil on canvas 65 x 81 cm
Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris


1893 Study of a man with hands in his pockets:
Caillebotte and the subject of this drawing, his friend Eugène Lamy, shared a love of yachting and the artist’s suburban home was located near a popular club in Argenteuil.
The Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio.

1893 Study of a man with hands in his pockets
black chalk on paper 47.6 x 32.5 cm
The Cleveland Museum of Art, OH

1893 Regatta at Argenteuil
oil on canvas 157 x 117 cm
Private Collection

1893 Chrysanthemums in the Garden at Petit-Gennevilliers: 

Although Caillebotte was a lifelong gardener, his interest in floral subjects did not develope until the 1880s. This work of 1893 depicts flowers that he cultivated on his property at Petit-Gennevilliers, a small town on the Seine just northwest of Paris. Chrysanthemums were hugely popular in France, celebrated for their resplendent colors and associations with East Asia, whose arts and cultures were greatly admired by Europeans. This unusual, close-up view of densely packed blossoms has been related to Caillebotte’s project for dining room doors ornamented with images of plants—a conception akin to the decorative series that his friend Monet based on his own garden at Giverny.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

1893 Chrysanthemums in the garden at Petit-Gennevilliers
oil on canvas 99.4 x 61.6 cm
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

1894 or before
A Garden in Trouville
oil on canvas 65 x 82 cm

before 1894 Roses in a Vase
oil on canvas 46 x 38 cm

before 1894 Banks of the Seine at Petit-Gennevilliers
oil on canvas 43.5 x50.8 cm
Argenteuil Municipal Museum

Note: Dates were not found for the remainder of this post:

n.d. Argenteuil Walk
oil on canvas 65 x 73.8 cm

n.d. A garden in Trouville
oil on canvas 65 x 81.5 cm

n.d. The fields, plains of Gennevilliers, study in yellow and green
oil on canvas 54.6 x 65.2 cm
Denver Art Museum, Colorado

n.d. Flower bed, Petit-Gennevilliers garden
oil on canvas 54.3 x 65.1 cm

n.d. On the pond, waterlilies, Yerres
oil on cardboard 19 x 28 cm
Private Collection

n.d. Meadow at Argenteuil Bridge
oil on canvas 54.3 x 65.4 cm

n.d. Lilacs and peonies in two vases
oil on canvas 92 x 72 cm

n.d. Rue du Mont-Cenis, Montmartre
oil on canvas 55.2 x 46.3 cm

n.d. Woman with parasol, Yerres
oil on canvas 39.5 x 25 cm

n.d. Two Partridges
oil on canvas 38.1 x 55.2 cm

n.d. The Seine at Pointe d’Epinay
oil on canvas 65 x 81 cm

Wednesday, 19 March 2025

Gustave Caillebotte - part 4

 

Self-portrait c1892
oil on canvas 40.5 x 32.5 cm
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

Gustave Caillebotte was an influential French painter best known for his involvement in the Impressionist movement, though he also notably subscribed to a Realist aesthetic. The more naturalistic hues, neutral tones, and attention to perspectival space in his works set him apart from other Impressionist painters. As an artist familiar with Japanese prints, Caillebotte often mimicked the style of ukiyo-e artists by utilizing a tilted perspective to depict the stretching boulevards and river scenes of Paris, such as in Paris Street, Rainy Day (1877). Born on August 19, 1848 in Paris, France to a wealthy family, the artist went on to study painting first with Léon Joseph Florentine Bonnat and then at the École des Beaux-Arts. After Caillebotte inherited money from his parents, he was able to not only fund his own career but support Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Edgar Degas, Camille Pissaro and other artists by purchasing their work. Caillebotte’s work is in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Musée d’Orsay in Paris, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, among others. He died on February 21, 1894 in Gennevilliers, France.

For earlier works, and for more biographical information, see parts 1 - 3 also. 

This is part 4 of a 5-part series on the works of Gustave Caillebotte:


1883 Bouquet of roses in a crystal vase
 oil on canvas 61 x 50.5 cm

1882 Yellow roses in a vase
oil on canvas 53 x 46 cm
Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, TX

1882 Woman sitting on a red-flowered sofa
oil on canvas 78.7 c 88.9 cm
Seattle Art Museum, WA

1882 View of the Sea from Villerville
oil on canvas 59.7 x 73.7 cm
Private Collection

1882 Undergrowth alley, Normandy
oil on canvas 81 x 62 cm

1882-84 Wild garden at Petit Gennevilliers
oil on canvas 63.7 x 74.2 cm

c1882 The Basin at Argenteuil
oil on canvas 65.5 x 81 cm

c1882 Plate with peaches
oil on canvas 38 x 46.4 cm
Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam

c1882 Chickens, Game Birds, and Hares:

Known largely for his figure and landscape paintings, Gustave Caillebotte also painted a series of stunning still lifes depicting fruit, shellfish, meat, chickens, and dead game. His exacting eye for realistic detail is evident in this view of chickens, game birds, and rabbits neatly arranged in a butcher shop. Fur, skin, and feathers are rendered with small, broken strokes of kaleidoscopic colour—shimmering blues, deep reds, radiant yellows, and glowing greens. This superb display of Impressionist technique applied to a traditional subject forms a fascinating counterpoint to Caillebotte’s Portrait of a Man in the museum’s collection.

The Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio.

c1882 Chickens, game birds and hares
oil on canvas 75.9 x 105.1 cm
The Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

c1882 Calf’s Head and Ox Tongue
oil on canvas 73 x 54 cm
 Art Institute of Chicago, IL

c1882 Calf in a butcher shop
oil on canvas (size not given)
Private Collection

1883 Houses in Argenteuil
oil on canvas 65.8 x 53.6 cm

1883 Game birds and lemons
oil on canvas 51 x 81 cm
Private Collection

1883 Boats at anchor, on the Seine, in Argenteuil
oil on canvas 65.5 x 54.5 cm

1883 Avenue of the Villa des Fleurs in Trouville
oil on canvas 60 x 73 cm
Museum Barberini, Potsdam

1883 The Seine at Argenteuil, boats at anchor
oil on canvas 60.2 x 73 cm
Private Collection

1883 The Promenade at Argenteuil
oil on canvas 65 x 82 cm
Private Collection

1883 Portrait of Henri Cordier
oil on canvas 65 x 81.5 cm
Musee d'Orsay, Paris

1883 Lilacs and peonies in two vases
oil on canvas 92 x 73 cm
Museum Barberini, Potsdam

c1883 The Argenteuil bridge and the Seine
oil on canvas 65 x 82 cm
Museum Barberini, Potsdam

c1883 Bouquet of Chrysanthemums
 oil on canvas 65 x 54.3 cm

1884 Man in a Smock or Father Magliore on the road between Saint-clair and Etretat
oil on canvas 65 x 54 cm
Private Collection

1884 Man drying his leg
oil on canvas 100 x 125 cm

1884 Man at his bath
oil on canvas 144.8 x 114.3 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA

1884 By the sea at Trouville
oil on canvas (details not found)

1884 Villas at Trouville:

Gustave Caillebotte painted this view of villas at Trouville, a small town on the Normandy coast, using the distinctive plunging perspectives he had developed in his Parisian street scenes. Varying degrees of paint thickness are skilfully employed to evoke a feeling of immense space and distance. The thicker strokes in the foreground contrast with the delicate, wispy strokes in the sea and the pools of sunlight reflected on the distant water.

The Cleveland Museum of Art, OH.

1884 Villas at Trouville
oil on canvas 66 x 81.3 cm
The Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

1884 The yellow fields at Gennevilliers
oil on canvas 54 x 64.7 cm
Wallraf-Richartz Museum,, Cologne, Germany

1884 Seaside, Normandy
oil on vanvas 92.4 x 73 cm

1884 Richard Gallo and his dog Dick, in Petit-Gennevilliers
 oil on canvas 89 x 116 cm

c1884 Wild Garden at Le Petit Gennevilliers
oil on canvas 63.7 x 74.2 cm
Museum Barberini, Potsdam

c1885-86 Sunflowers along the Seine
oil on canvas 90.2 x 71.1 cm
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, CA

1885-87 The Seine and the Railroad Bridge at Argenteuil
oil on canvas 115.6 x 154.9 cm
Brooklyn Museum, New York

c1885 Sunflowers, garden of Petit Gennevilliers: 

Due to its size, this view of Caillebotte's garden is one of the most ambitious painted by the artist. It contributes to the redefinition of the landscape genre carried out by the Impressionists.

The garden is one of Caillebotte's favourite themes, who first took as his subject the park of the family estate in Yerres, then, as here, his garden at Petit Gennevilliers, located about ten kilometres from Paris. The artist became a true "painter-gardener" like his friend Monet in Giverny and both were enthusiastic about the "suns", large sunflowers cultivated only as an ornamental plant at that time.

Musée d'Orsay, Paris.

c1885 Sunflowers, garden of Petit Gennevilliers
oil on canvas 130.5 x 105.8 cm
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

c1885 Portrait of Jean Daurelle
oil on canvas 65.4 x 54.4 cm
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

c1885 Apple Tree in Bloom
oil on canvas 83.3 x 60 cm
Brooklyn Museum, New York

1886 The pontoon at Argenteuil
oil on canvas (dimensions not found)
Private Collection

1886 Roses in the garden at Petit Gennevilliers
oil on canvas 89 x 116 cm
Private Collection

1886 Portrait of Émile-Jean Fontaine, bookseller
oil on canvas 65.1 x 81.6 cm

1887-88 Yellow and red roses in a crystal vase
oil on canvas 45.8 x 37.9 cm

1887 Vase of Gladiolas
oil on canvas 81 x 65 cm
Private Collection

1887 Portrait of Jean Daurelle
oil on canvas 75.7 x 46.7 cm
Musée d'Orsay, Paris