The Umbrellas - Auguste Renoir
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L'œuvre en bref
Painted in two stages, between 1881 and 1885, Auguste Renoir's The Umbrellas offers a fascinating testimony to the painter's stylistic evolution. The right side, with the woman and the children, was painted around 1881 in the Impressionist manner characteristic of that period; the left side, added four years later after his trip to Italy, reflects his new, more linear and structured approach, known as the "harsh manner." The subject, a Parisian street scene in the rain, belongs to the tradition of urban modernity chronicles also dear to Gustave Caillebotte and Édouard Manet.
The composition gathers a crowd of Parisians sheltered beneath blue umbrellas whose domes form a veritable textile ceiling at the top of the canvas. In the foreground, an elegant young woman with a wicker basket, rendered with precise contours and a tight brushstroke, silently engages with the viewer. On the right, a little girl wearing a hat adorned with feathers holds a hoop, while her mother leans tenderly toward her, these figures painted more freely with blurred, shimmering strokes. The palette, dominated by deep blues, slate greys, and muted browns, subtly conveys the damp, grey atmosphere of a rainy day in Paris, transfigured by Renoir's chromatic genius.
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Reproduction of Regattas in Argenteuil by Claude Monet
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