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Overview
"There are moments when I feel overwhelmed, when I don't know anything. My hand makes a series of strokes, but my eye is not in command, I follow my stream of thought... when I stop and step back, I am astonished at what I have done"
A contemporary of the Post-Impressionists, Henri Le Sidaner developed a distinctly individual approach. His technique often draws on Pointillism, yet he rejected its high-key colour, favouring greys and opalescent tones to create atmosphere, using broken brushwork to soften contours and diffuse light.
Born in Port Louis, Mauritius, in 1862, he returned to France in childhood and trained in Paris under Alexandre Cabanel. Encounters with the work of Claude Monet and Édouard Manet shaped his early direction, and by the late 1880s he was exhibiting at the Salon des Artistes Français. Periods spent in the fishing port of Étaples offered an alternative to academic study and informed his early subjects. From the late 1890s, his work turned towards more intimate, light-inflected scenes - gardens, quiet streets and waterside settings - typically without figures. Following his move to Gerberoy in 1901, the gardens he created there became a central motif. His career included regular exhibitions in Paris, London and the United States, a retrospective at Galerie Georges Petit in 1910, and election to the Académie des Beaux-Arts in 1930.
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