| Jean
Baptist Camille Corot (1796-1875)
The son of a Parisian
shopkeeper, the young Corot was hired as a salesman by a cloth
merchant, despite his evident gift for drawing. Clearly lacking
an aptitude for business, he was already twenty-six when his
father gave him an allowance so that he could devote himself
entirely to his vocation.
Studying with A. Michallon, with whom he painted his first
landscapes in the Forest of Fontainebleau, and then with Victor
Bertin, he took his first trip to Italy in 1825. There he enjoyed
the friendship of Caruelle d'Aligny and Edouard Bertin who shared
his passion for painting from nature. On his return three years
later, he adopted a pattern of work, which he maintained throughout
his life, of painting in his Paris studio during the winter
and devoting the summer to traveling in France, interrupted
by frequent visits to Ville d'Avray, Chailly and Barbizon.
From spring to autumn, he lived with his parents at Ville d'Avray.
He worked in the mornings and evenings, capturing the light
and atmosphere of his favorite times of day. He was an extremely
kind and generous man much loved by his fellow artists, whom
he was always ready to help with money and advice.
During his long career he became one of the most celebrated
artists of his generation and exerted tremendous influence on
the painters of the Impressionist movement. He was awarded numerous
medals and the coveted Legion of Honor in 1846. Acknowledged
as the world's foremost landscape painter, fame did not spoil
the simplicity of his character. His work can be found in important
public collections around the world.
The title of the present work, Le Dormoir, refers to a shaded
space where herds of cattle or sheep can rest. Le Dormoir was
painted towards the end of Corot's life and captures the poetic
beauty and dreamy quality present in his final paintings. Unlike
his earlier works, Corot's paintings of the 1870s feature increasingly
mythical and romantic subject matter, a softer paint application,
and lyrical subtext. In 1873, the year in which he painted Le
Dormoir, Corot created a number of vertical landscapes featuring
small dancing and working figures beneath towering trees (i.e.
Pastorale Souvenir d Italie, Glasgow Art Gallery and Museum).
Like Pastorale, Le Dormoir is a harmonious composition that
invites the viewer to a romantic vision of the forest and rural
life.
Museum Collections Include:
Musee du Louvre, Paris; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York;
Yale University Art Gallery; Le Petit Palais, Paris; The Frick
Collection, New York; The Phillips Collection, Washington D.C.;
The Hermitage, St Petersburg; J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles;
The Art Institute of Chicago; Fitzwilliam Museum at the University
of Cambridge; Guggenheim Hermitage Museum, Las Vegas; Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Corcoran
Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.; Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco;
High Museum of Art, Atlanta; Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth,
TX; Kunstmuseum Basel, Switzerland; Los Angeles County Museum
of Art; Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena; Neue Pinakothek, Munich;
numerous other French, European, and American museums
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