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Forest of Fontainebleau

Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot1834

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Washington, DC, United States

The impressionist style developed as a method to render more accurately the appearance of the natural world, and was principally a technique for landscape painting. Corot, whose career began in the late 1820s when the academic tradition of landscape painting was being revived, was one of the most prolific and influential exponents of the genre. _Forest of Fontainebleau_, painted for and exhibited at the Salon of 1834, is a historic landscape, the hybrid category devised to elevate the status of landscape painting by combining with it the subjects of history painting. Although Corot's principal subject here was landscape, contemporaries readily identified the reclining woman in the foreground as Mary Magdalene. Her unbound hair and peasant costume, the deer in the background, and her solitude in the wilderness are traditional attributes of the saint.


In accord with academic training,_ Forest of Fontainebleau_ was created in the studio on the basis of sketches and studies that had been painted outdoors. The artist's humble attitude toward nature, unostentatious compositions, responsive paint handling, and conscientious clarity and freshness of vision distinguish his work from the formulaic landscapes of academic contemporaries. Corot declined to participate in the first impressionist exhibition, but his pervasive influence was manifest in works by pupils and followers including Pissarro, Morisot, Renoir, Monet, and Sisley.


More information on this painting can be found in the Gallery publication _French Paintings of the Nineteenth Century, Part I: Before Impressionism_, which is available as a free PDF <u>https://www.nga.gov/content/dam/ngaweb/research/publications/pdfs/french-paintings-nineteenth-century.pdf</u>

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  • Title: Forest of Fontainebleau
  • Creator: Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
  • Date Created: 1834
  • Physical Dimensions: overall: 175.6 x 242.6 cm (69 1/8 x 95 1/2 in.) framed: 196.9 x 262.9 cm (77 1/2 x 103 1/2 in.)
  • Provenance: Louis-Alfred Binant [1823-1904], Paris, by 1855;[1] (his sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 20 April 1904, no. 18); purchased by (Bernheim-Jeune, Paris).[2] Léon Orosdi, Paris, sometime after 1913.[3] (Galerie André Weil, Paris);[4] (Etienne Bignou, Paris); sold 25 June 1934 to Chester Dale [1883-1962], New York; bequest 1963 to NGA. [1] Alfred Robaut, _L'oeuvre de Corot_, Paris, 1905: II:90, no. 255. Lent by "M. Binand" to _Exposition de centenaire de Corot_, Palais Galliéra, Paris, 1895, no. 18; this seems likely to be a misspelling in the catalogue. [2] Robaut 1905 (see note 1) and reported in the _New York Herald_, 21 April 1904. [3] This painting was not included in the sale of Orosdi's collection held at Drouot on 25 May 1923. [4] Orosdi/Galerie Weil provenance from Chester Dale papers in NGA curatorial records, and the Bignou photograph albums at the Documentation, Musée d'Orsay (copies in NGA curatorial files).
  • Rights: CC0
  • Medium: oil on canvas
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

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