Le Pavillon, Gerberoy (1909)

Technique: Giclée quality print
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More about this artwork

Le Pavillon, Gerberoy, painted in 1909 by French artist Henri Le Sidaner, is a captivating impressionistic portrayal of a serene garden. This masterful landscape depicts a small, quaint pavilion, partially obscured by lush foliage and situated in an enchanting garden. The focal point of this gentle scene is a small pond, ringed with flowers bursting in soft pinks and rich greens under the subtle hues of dimming daylight.Le Sidaner's brushwork creates a textured, dream-like quality, blurring the boundaries between forms and imbuing the scene with a tranquil, almost mystical atmosphere. The cottage in the background blends harmoniously with the natural elements, embodying a quiet retreat from the world, suggestive of tranquility and peaceful solitude.

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Henri Eugène Augustin Le Sidaner (7 August 1862 – 14 July 1939) who was a contemporary of the Post-impressionists, was an intimist painter known for his paintings of domestic interiors and quiet street scenes. His style contained elements of impressionism with the influences of Édouard Manet, Monet and of the Pointillists discernible in his work. Le Sidaner favoured a subdued use of colour, preferring nuanced greys and opals applied with uneven, dappled brushstrokes to create atmosphere and mysticism. A skilled nocturne painter, he travelled widely throughout France and Europe before settling at Gerberoy in the Picardy countryside from where he painted for over thirty years.

Le Sidaner's paintings and pastels were widely collected throughout his career. His seductive views of the gardens he created in the ruins of the medieval fortress at Gerberoy, with their recently vacated tables dappled in sunlight and overhung by roses, have cemented his reputation as a unique artist who does not fit easily into an art movement.