Pierre-Auguste Renoir | The Rocks of L’Estaque, 1882 *****


This is one of a small series of radiant landscapes that the Pierre-Auguste Renoir painted during a stay with Paul Cézanne in L'Estaque, a small fishing port just west of Marseilles.
Renoir, who was travelling back to Paris having spent the previous months in Algeria and Italy, was immediately captivated by the raw light and rich beauty of the Provençal landscape.
"How beautiful it is!" he wrote to a friend, "It's certainly the most beautiful place in the world, and not yet inhabited… There are only some fishermen and the mountains…so there are no walls, no properties or few…here I have the true countryside at my doorstep".


With its luminous blue sky, verdant green vegetation and sun-dappled hills punctuated by delicate, iridescent blue shadows, Rochers de l’Estaque demonstrates Renoir’s joyful enthusiasm and ardent appreciation for this bucolic and unspoilt natural landscape.
On his arrival in L’Estaque in January 1882, Renoir settled in the Hôtel des Bains where he planned to stay "for a fortnight".
Cézanne and Renoir soon began painting together, depicting the sun-drenched landscape en plein air.

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