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A painting by Camille Pissarro depicting the urban scene of Paris in 1897. Learn about the artist, the medium, the dimensions, the provenance, and the exhibition history of this artwork at The Met.
- Marketplace in Pontoise
Ludovic-Rodo Pissarro; John Rewald; Robert Lehman (acquired...
- Goose Girl
Goose Girl - Camille Pissarro | The Boulevard Montmartre on...
- Cowherd
Cowherd - Camille Pissarro | The Boulevard Montmartre on a...
- The Maid at the Market
The Maid at the Market - Camille Pissarro | The Boulevard...
- The Cottage
Title: The Cottage Artist: Camille Pissarro (French,...
- The Harvest, Pontoise
The artist is borrowing a subject from the great Barbizon...
- Marketplace in Pontoise
Learn about Pissarro's series of 14 views of the Boulevard Montmartre in Paris, painted in 1897 from his hotel window. See how he captured the different types of artificial light, such as electric, gas and oil lamps, in this night scene.
Learn how Pissarro painted the lively street life of Paris in different weather conditions and times of day, including this rare night view. See how he used bold brushstrokes, tonal contrasts and reflections to create a silvery and vital impression of the boulevard.
Boulevard Montmartre, matin d'hiver (ou Le Boulevard Montmartre un matin d'hiver) est une peinture de Camille Pissarro de 1897. Elle date d'une époque où le peintre s'était déjà éloigné de l'impressionnisme et des techniques picturales pointillistes.
The Boulevard Montmartre on a Winter Morning is one of fourteen oil-on-canvas paintings by French artist Camille Pissarro of one of Paris’s grandest thoroughfares. Each painting in the series shows a different time of day and weather.
Camille Pissarro's Boulevard Montmartre at Night is now considered as the most celebrated night scene created by impressionists, along with The Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh.
23 sie 2021 · Le Boulevard de Montmartre, Matinée de Printemps is an 1897 oil on canvas painting of Paris' Boulevard Montmartre by the French artist Camille Pissarro. By 1923 it was in the collection of the German industrialist and Holocaust victim Max Silberberg (de).