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Umbrellas on the Beach, Brittany, 1896 (circa)
33 x 22.9 cm
This work will be included in the James Wilson Morrice Catalogue Raisonné being compiled by Lucie Dorais.
Provenance
Estate of the artist;Family of the artist;
Private collection, Quebec.
But Morrice, who moved to Paris in 1890, was more interested in Dutch art and Whistler than in contemporary French art. So his leaving Paris "precipitately" to paint “the bathers” of Saint-Malo (Brittany) in early June 1896 (letter to his American friend Robert Henri) comes as a surprise for us; and a disappointment for him: their absence that early in the season sent him to the nearby fishing town of Cancale, and a second stay at Saint-Malo in July ended the same way: "The place is becoming tiresome. Outside of the beach there is not much to paint." (ibid.).
His Sketchbook #2 (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts) contains mostly drawings of Cancale, but one page shows two tiny women sitting on chairs, seen at a far distance on what looks like a beach. No bathers... In the 19th century, only children and men dared to enter the sea; the women, fully dressed and wearing hats, spent their days under large parasols in these “outdoor living rooms”. Sporting a suntan, especially on the face, was definitely a no-no: it was only good for those who worked outdoors, the peasants. More sitting women occupy the foreground of this delicious panel, discovered recently; if there are now bathers, they are reduced to small silhouettes. The painting probably represent Saint-Malo, whose dark turquoise water has given the name Côte d'Emeraude to that part of the coast, and where the ramparts offered a convenient vantage point over the beach. But this is not just another beach by Morrice... in fact, it has no parallel in his entire oeuvre.
Historically, it might be his first painting of people on a beach; artistically, it is a direct witness to that brief period, which coincided with his discovery of Impressionism and clear colours, when the artist looked for inspiration in Japanese prints. The vertical composition, rare for a beach subject, is clearly inspired by them: view from above with a strong dark tone at the top to flatten the perspective, some elements cut by the frame, all carefully placed on a flat surface. This is especially notable in the upper half, where the bright sand and colourful parasols, which evoke stylized chrysanthemums, attract the eye; to enhance the effect, the "artist with the delicate eye" (as his friend Matisse called him) purposefully left the lower, more descriptive portion, in the shade.
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