Description
This drawing's unusual technique reflects the ideas of the French painting movement known as Pointillism or Divisionism. Its most famous practitioner, Georges Seurat (1859–1891), developed a technique of applying color in short strokes or dots. Seurat's friend Charles Angrand was influenced by this method, and both artists developed a related technique for their drawings. In the sheet shown here, Angrand used a black, manufactured charcoal stick on a paper textured with tiny ridges. The highest of these ridges hold the charcoal, but the paper shows through in the small spaces between them. This creates the effect of a soft, diffuse evening light that dissolves the curved shapes of haystacks and turns the landscape into an expansive abstraction of nature.
Provenance
Artist’s family, by descent; (Galerie Lespinasse, Rouen, sold to Mr. P. L.) (1999); Mr. P. L. (1999); (Galerie Berès, Paris, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art, 1999) (1999); Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1999 -)
Accession Number
1999.49
Medium
charcoal on cream laid paper
Dimensions
Sheet: 49.1 x 63.5 cm (19 5/16 x 25 in.)
Classification
Drawing
Credit Line
Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund