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Sisley Alfred | 1839-1899 | [ Back | Photos ]
The landscape paintings of Alfred
Sisley occupy an inviolable position
in the history of early Impressionism.
His depictions of the Thames at Hampton
Court, the Seine in flood, the snow
bound suburbs of Paris are indispensable
to an account of Impressionist landscape
painting in the 1870s. Indeed, they
are so fundamentally representative
of our notion of what constitutes
'pure' Impressionism, that the re-evaluation
of the movement in recent years has
often left Sisley stranded outside
it. This has greatly added to the
comparative neglect of his work. He
is famous but not known, admired but
little studied. Many accounts of Impressionism
treat him perfunctorily; assessments
run on the comfortable premise that
he was a marvellous painter for two
or three years but became a victim
of his style and collapsed into an
irreversible decline. ... While there
can be little doubt that the best
paintings were made in the 1870s,
there are vigorous and beautiful works
from the years that followed.
Other reasons exist for Sisley's shadowy
reputation. Most obviously, his output
appears less substantial and less
clearly directed than that of his
associates - Monet, Renoir and Pissarro.
Their later evolutions, especially
those of Monet and Renoir, drew Impressionism
into the early twentieth century.
Sisley's death at the very end of
the nineteenth assumes a symbolic
resonance. It signals the dissolution
of the kind of Impressionism to which
he had devoted his working life. His
relatively early death put an end
to the unmistakable signs of renewal
in his painting of the 1890s: a late
flowering, withered almost before
it had begun.
Compared with that of his colleagues,
Sisley's development was neither complex
nor dramatic. The personality his
work exudes is reticent and sober,
marked, as the American painter Marsden
Hartley wrote, by a 'solemn severity'.
The influences digested in his early
years, both English and French, served
their purpose throughout his life.
There are, of course, recognizable
phases within his work, for Sisley
was a highly conscious artist. Yet
once the excitement of the Impressionist
moment was over, his pace was leisurely
and his evolution unforced. It is
tempting to attribute this quiet self-effacement
to his English origins, through which
an innate insularity was transferred
to the Ile de France. Several of his
forebears, for example, were conspicuous
for a plucky adventurousness followed
by bourgeois consolidation. The pattern
of Sisley's evolution is much the
same.
Recent Impressionist studies have
been devoted, for the most part, to
an investigation of subject matter
and iconography - Sisley's work does
not readily submit itself to such
analysis. There is almost no overt
social or political content in his
painting, no informative celebration
of contemporary people, no agrarian
comment or escapist Mediterranean
allure. It is true that he was not
attracted to aspects of urban life,
as found in Renoir, nor to the ideological
impulses that inform, for example,
much of Pissarro's work. For most
of his life Sisley was content to
depict the traditional activities
of countryside and rural waterways
as they impinged on the landscape.
In the 1870s, working in all the places
whose names recur in the early history
of Impressionism - Bougival, Argenteuil,
Marty, Louveciennes - Sisley resolutely
turned his back on their social life.
He concentrated instead on undisturbed
or only distantly animated aspects
of his surroundings. This has led
to an underestimation of those elements
of the everyday scene which do, in
fact, appear intermittently throughout
his painting. There are many moments
of private leisure - there are trains,
factory chimneys, pleasure boats and
barges, a forge, a flood rescue, quayside
activities; there are the flags and
crowds of regattas on the Thames and
of Paris effete at the Point du Jour.
None of these should be omitted from
an account of Sisley's role within
Impressionism viewed in its social
context.
No substantial biography of Sisley
has yet been written. His life is
not well documented and this has furthered
his neglect. Although he wrote many
letters, few are personally revealing
or of exceptional interest. There
are no journals or autobiographical
writings and he died before celebrity
might have sent interviewers and photographers
to his door. At the same time, the
change in his character from high
spirits and sociability to a seemingly
misanthropic and suspicious demeanour
accounts for the virtual disappearance
of his name from the memoirs and letters
of several of his early friends. As
a result of this profil perdu, the
few facts about Sisley's life that
have long been taken for granted have
not been thoroughly examined. Since
the publication in 1959 of Francois
Daulte's catalogue raisonne, almost
no research has investigated Sisley's
life - misstatements and misconceptions
abound. Several of these have been
corrected...and use has been made
of unpublished letters and archival
documents. These modify or illuminate
at many points the biographical outline
of Sisley and set his work in a more
palpable context. New material has
shaped the narrative and deepened
that sense of Sisley as resourceful,
proud and solitary. In a passage on
the landscapes of Ruisdael, written
in 1875, Eugene Fromentin wrote of
the Dutch painter as
a dreamer, one of those men of whom
many exist in our own day but who
were rare in Ruisdael's time - one
of those lonely wanderers who flee
from the town, frequent the outskirts,
who love the country without exaggeration
and describe it without phrases, who
are made uneasy by distant horizons
but are charmed by open country, moved
by a shadow and enchanted by a shaft
of sunlight.
He goes on to suggest the sombre reasonableness
of Ruisdael's melancholy, the product
neither of self-indulgent immaturity
nor of the fretful self pity of old
age. No one familiar with Sisley's
painting or his character can fail
to be reminded of them by Fromentin's
words. They were written in the year
when Sisley produced some of his finest
paintings, and at the start of one
of the most discouraging periods of
his life. He was at the height of
his powers, superbly endowed with
gifts that place his achievements
on a level with those of Renoir, Monet
and Pissarro. In particular, he faultlessly
conveys those startling moments of
perception in which a scene is removed
from its surroundings, however commonplace,
and steeped in an undefinable emotion
- the Marly aqueduct, the flooded
inn by the Seine, a passer by in the
snow, a girl swinging in an orchard,
a wave breaking over a rock on the
shore. He has the power of transcribing
such scenes as though be had been
searching for them all along, and
yet he reveals them with an air of
diffidence that disarms while it captivates.
It is at such moments that Sisley
enlarges our perception of Impressionist
painting and joins the ranks of the
great European landscapists.
From Richard Shone, "Sisley"
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| Sisley Alfred |
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| Path of the Etarch |
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| Sun setting at Moret |
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| Flood at Port-Marly |
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| The first Hoarfrost |
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| Snow at Louveciennes |
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| Winter sun, Moret |
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